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Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

BIG BEND

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

000

Reds win
second game
in row 5-1

Pick 3:375
Pick 4: 0485
Cards : 2-H, 2-C
9-D; 9-S
Super Lotto:

PageS

LARGE

ASSORTED FLAVORS
VELVET

SOUTHERN
PEACHES

Vol. 42, No. 62
Copyrighted 1991

By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel News Staff
A fast-approaching deadline and
a loggerhead situation between
officials at lhe Ohio Department of
Development and the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers made for a
tense meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners on Wednesday
afternoon.
The deadline at hand is one
established by the Corps for bids
on work at the Middleport sewage
lagoon. Contracts on the project are

scheduled to awarded next week,
and corps regulations require any
matching local funds to be in the
hands of their office before the
award is made.
However, lhe Ohio Department
of Development, which has awarded $199,000 in Imminent Threat
monies toward the project, refused
to forward the money to the county
until the work was completed.
At the commencement of yesterday' s meeting, the future of the
projec t stood threatened because

DOVER, Del. (AP) - The fail ure to win concessions on credit
and costly natural gas contracts left
Columbia Gas System Inc. and iiS
pipeline subsidiary little choice but
to ftle
analysts say.

NEEDED

they've had," Paul R. Ferritti said
Wednesday. Ferritti is senior vice
president at Dillon Read &amp; Co. Inc.
in New York.
He said the other option was to
negotiate with bankers and natural
suvvue:rs and that apparently

r.------------------------------~-----,

PURE CANE

"

\b Ol; ••••••

FREE HOT DOG, ............... ..

Domino Sugar

qq(

ARMOUR FAT
Limit One With Coupon
and $10.00 Additional
Purchase
___________
j

S LB.
~h~s.

BAG

---------------------ANGEL SOFT

Bathroom

4 ROLL

PKG.
ASSORTED

Brawny
Paper Towels

ROLL

$

SPRITE • DIET or

Coca-Cola
Classic 12 PACK

SPORTSWEAR - Jackie Brooks, seated, listens carefully as
Cyrstal Vaughan explains her sportswear outfit that she made for
her 4-H project for the Meigs County Fair. The judging was conducted at Pomeroy Village Hall.

99oz.

Roy Sprague named to
BREC Board of Trustees

12
CANS

People attending the 38th annual
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. opened their meeting with
a moment of silence in memory of
former board of trustees member
Clyde Walker, of Thurman, who
died July 25.
Roy D. Sprague, of Gallipolis,
was selected to fill Walker's post
as the board's secretary-treasurer
during a board session July 29.
More than 250 consumers and
guesiS were on hand at lhe July 26
meeting at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center near Rio Grande.
The Rev. Dirk Elliott provided

"
( .'' ·; ~··~ : . SPRINGDALE
.,.

'

1

·:s:l
\ -~~.·~n't "' 1.1
.:."'.... ·: J
1

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,.,. . ,..
.• '···

POWDER-32 OZ.

Chocolate
Dr .• nk GALLON

. ,... . :_ t .

DUNCAN HINES-18 OZ.

,

~:~..................... 79(

~~~~:GENT ............ 99(

9
9
(
SHORTENING .......... .

BUMBlE BEE.

SWIFT'NING-42 OZ .

TUNA

-~! ;~tAr~$ 79
.~~\i::~ CHIPS ..................... .]

b.s oz ........ .

ASSORTED VARIETIES

11 oz.

BANQUET

POT PIES

7 oz. box

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59

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We

•

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Quantities o Prices Effective Thru Sat .,

CLOROX
BLEACH

YUBI 8 oz. CTN.3
YOGURT

I $1 09

~SHEDD'S-3LB.

e

~~g~~~~ ..............$..199

GAILON ....

99(

the in vocation. Board presidcn1
Gene Nance and interim manager
Tom McElroy delivered !heir annual reports. Guest speakers included
Richard K. Byrne, presidcn~ Ohio
Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc.,
and Amy Jackson of Gallipolis, the
winner of the co-op's annual scholarship competition and secondplace finisher in the statewide contest.
The cooperative is headquartered in Gallipolis and serves
15,000 member-consumers in Gallia, Jackson, Vinton, Ross, Meigs,
Pike, Scioto, Lawrence and Alhens
Counties.

r----Local briefs.---.

. . . . . . . . $.199
~~~:Ls . . . . . . . . 79(

JIF- 18 OZ.

Water to be off Tuesday

:~~~T

On Tuesday the TupP!lrS Plains-Chester Water District wiU have

the water off for approximately six hours in the Tuppers Plains area.

BOUNTY

\~ MEADOW GOLD-12 CT.

•

both agencies refused to make tering the funds for the village of
exceptions to their policies.
Middleport at the request of th e
However, after several phone state. In addition to those Imminent
calls between Commissioner Threat monies, the village itself
Richard Jones, officials at the will front $12,000 and the county
Department of Development and (through state-issued Community
Alan Elberfeld of the Corps of Development Block Grant funds)
Engineers, it was agreed that a let- wiD contribute $30,000 in order to
ter of credit would be issued to lhe make the local contribution to the
county commissioners, who in turn project. The corps will provide
would endorse it and forward it to $50,000 of the total cost.
lhe corps so that lhe project could
The corps had agreed to perform
get underway as scheduled.
the erosion-repair projec t in
The commissioners are adminis- December, 1990.

In other business. the commissioners agreed to apply for Litter
Control grant monies for 1992, and
voted to continue a $16,000 local
match for lhat program in the year
ahead.
Meigs County Highway Department Superintendent Ted Warner
reported that Issue 2 funded road
paving projects are now completed.
Warner also said that the department is mowing in areas lhroughout the county.
The commissioners also:

Columbia Gas files for
bankruptcy protection
NO
COUPON

c

2 Socllon, 12 Pagea 25 cenlo
AMulllmedlo Inc. Newapapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 1,1991

Project appeared to be in jeopardy at start of commissioners meeting

'h Gal.·
Ctn. ·

•

High today In 90s. Friday,

sunny and bot.

Sewage lagoon project will start on schedule

Super Dip
Ice Cream

LB.

1-2-18-29-34-42
Kicker:l02822

The effected areas will be on Route 7 going North beginning 300
feet before the Gulf Station on the East side until Vanderhoof Road;
both sides to the Route 50 interchange; from Route 7 East on Route
681 up to and including Rice Run Road; and the Arbaugh Subdivision will also be affected.
'
The TP-C Water District will be removing and replacing a main
line regulator. Rain will postpone the work.
Continued on page 3

. 1. •USDA Food Stamps and WlC Coupons Accepted • Not Responsible for Typographical or Pictorial Errors

.'

failed.
For more than a month.
Columbia tried to negotiate settlements with its natural gas suppliers
who have Columbia Transmission
locked into long-term contracts that
force it to pay above-market prices
for natural gas. At the same time,
Columbia Gas System had been
meeting with its bankers to reestablish a line of credit
Ferritti said Columbia probably
felt it was running out of time and
could not reach agreements before
cold weather set in.
"I guess it's not all that surprisbut nevertheless, it's disapp~inting . You would have thought
would have avoided bankruptcy, the producers would have
agreed to settlements and the
bankers would have agreed to
extend credit to existing loans." he
said.
Columbia Gas System, one of
the nation's largest natural gas suppliers, and its primary subsidiary.
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
both filed Wednesday for reorganization under Chapter I I in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington.
Columbia Gas System is headquartered in Wilmington, while
Columbia Gas Transmission is
based in Charleston, W.Va.
Lawrence Crowley. natural gas
analyst with Rauscher Pierce Refsnes in Houston, said he couldn't
speculate on why the producers
would not negotiate a settlement
with the contraciS.
"The only lhing I would say IS I
think Columbia is going to come
out of (bankruptcy) in form and
substance much different than
when they went into it. It's too
early to say what the format will
be, but I suspect it's goin~ to be
quite different," Crowley saJd.
For example, he said bankrupiCy
Continued on page 3

Columbia Gas Files
for Chapter 11
Columbia Gas System Inc.'s
bankruptcy stems In part lrom
depressed prtces fo r natural gas.
The company Is engaged in
long-term nalural gas contracts,
paying an average of $2.70 per
f ,000 cubic feet, with some
co ntraC1s as high as $6. The
average on lhe spot market is
$1.20.

PRACTICING FOR REVUE • Jennifer
Mora gives some pointers to Melissa Francis and
Christy Drake as they practice for the 4-H Style
Revue during tbe Meigs County Fair on Au~. 14

- appropriated $1,500 to the
Com mon Pleas Court's assigned
counsel fees budget;
- accepted the only bid submitted for bituminous products for
August from Asphalt Materials.
Inc .;
- approved an interdepamnental
transfer in Meigs County Court •s
budget in the amount of $607.
Present, in addition to Warner
Jones and Elberfeld, were Commis:
sioners Manning Roush and David
Koblentz and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

at 2 p.m. The girls practiced as they waited io be
judged on Wednesday for their clothing projects.

State, union job loss forecasts vary
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State officials say 675 government
employees could be laid off over
the next two years, but a union
spokesman says job losses by attrilion and other means could reach
4,000.
Elimination of the jobs would
occur as a result of the state's new,
$27.2 billion budget.
Gregory Browning. director of
the Offiee of Budget and Management, forecast the layoff of 675
full -time employees during the
two-year•life of the budget that
took effect Friday. The figure did
not reflect attrition or the elimination of unfilled jobs.
No extra money was provided in
the measure to cover the cost of a 4
percent pay raise lhal took effect
July I, or for an increase in heallh
insurance premiums. State agencies
will have to cover the extra
expense out of their existing bud-

gets.
"They all know they have to
absorb that 4 percent cost. There's
a relationship between lhat number
and the pressures on individual
agency budgets," Browning said.
In addition , negotiations are
ex pected later this y,ear on a new
contract with the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association to
replace one that expires Dec. 31.
" There arc all these variables
out there. I'm saying, given what
we know right now, given the fact
that we have a 4 percent pay raise
that just went into effect four
weeks ago and that we have to pay
for ... we know how much is funded for 1992 and 1993, put it all
together and you get the 67 5,"
Browning said Wednesday.
Peter Wray, public affairs director for OCSEA, said an agency-byagency analysis of potential job
losses still was being prepared for

the union.
"If most of our numbers hold
together. we still think there's
going to be 4,000 positions elirninated whether through actual layoffs or other attrition forms," Wray
said.
''We anticipate that vacancies
will go unfilled, other types of
attrition will be used to leave positions open, departments wiU irnplement early retirement incentive
programs ... and fmally there will
be outright layoffs, " he said.
Wray said an unofficial union
tally showed there ha':'e been 132
employee layoffs thts year. No
comparable fi~ure was available
from the Oh•o Department of
Administrative Services.
However, the DAS said as of
Jan . I, 1991, there were 59,318
full -ume and permanent part-time
stale government employees. As or
June 29 there were 59,179.

Ohio competing for new postal hub

Price per 1,000 cubic feet on last
day of month for near-term
delivery on the New Yor1&lt;
Mercantile Exchange.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Postal Service's attempt to get
more room for its planes already
has
Ohio competing with other
$1 .50
states, and Ohio cities competing
with each other.
On Wednesday . the airline
industry added a new element to
the competition.
The airlines told Congress
1.00
they're concerned the bigger facilities will inspire the Postal Serviee
to buy more planes and then fill
them with first-class mail that now
flies on commercial carriers.
.50
"We question the need for such
a large hub proposal," Nestor
Pylypec of the Air Transport Assocl8tion of America, told a congressional subcommittee.
The Postal Service wants to put
.00
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
a permanent regional air hub in
'
either Kentucky,lndiana. Illinois or
1991
'-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Ohio.
It is currently considerinl! bids
AP
SOurce NYI.£X

..

from 13 airportS that believe they
can meet the Postal Service's
requirements for sorting equipment, runway length and more.
Deputy Postmaster General
Michael Coughlin said the list of
requirements 1\'as compiled with an

138th Ohio
fair begins
this evening
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Three Ohio governors will put
aside politics when they gather to
officially open the 138th Ohio
State Fair.
The fair, one of the nation 's
largest, opens tonight It ends Aug.
18.
Continued on page 3

eye toward future expansion. But
that list raised red flags for the
commercial airlines, which now
carry nearly 2 billion pounds of
mail for the Postal Service each
year.
Coughlin said the extra sr.ace at
the proposed new hub docsn t automatically translate into a loss of
business for the commercial airlines.
For instance, lhe Postal Service
could use the extta space for a
spare parts depot to accommodate
the planned addition of thousands
of pieces of automated mail-handling equipment, he said.
Assistant Postmaster General
Allen Kane told the House Subcommittee on Postal Operations
that the extra space would give the
Postal Service more flexibility in
dealing, for instance, with security
problems and expanded Express
Mail service a few years hence.

�... . . .... '.

Commentary

• nursday, August 1, 1991
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, Au9ust 1, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Temperatures to climb back into 90s

OH 10 Wec~t h e r
Friday, Aug. 2
Accu- Weather~ forecast for

The Daily Sentinel

wAsHING!(&gt;N -

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AR~

'1MUlTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inla nd Dally Press Asso ciation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be tess than300
words long. All letters are subje&lt;t to editing and must be stgned with
name. address and telephone number. No un signed le tters wlll be pub·
!!shed . Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. no I personall·
ties .

Letters to the editor
Feels plan not in public's best interest
The policy committee should not
The public comments period for have the power to exempt any prothe Southeastern Ohio, Solid Waste posed landfill from a supposedly
Management District "Draft" Plan scientifically derived critenon. The
has been designated from July 2, policy committee is a political
body! not scientific. If the siting
through July 31, 1991.
This Plan, promulgated by cntena are necessary to protect the
House Bill 592 (H.B.592) is public health, safety and welfare
intended to serve as the basis for than why will the three proposed
the regulation and management of sites be exempted from the pro·
solid waste for each established posed criteria?
The landfill siting criteria pro"district for the next 20 years.
Our District is made up of posed in our draft plan are the minAthens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, imal ones set by the EPA. These
Meigs and Vinton Counties. The lack protection for rural areas
prepared draft plan must first be where luxuries such as alternative
open for review by the public prior water supplies from underground
to re-evaluation by the Ohio Envi- piping is unavailable. A standard
ronmental Protection Agency objective ranking system, using
(OEPA). Those who are concerned scientifically defendable informawith how this plan will effect our tion should be set up before any
future solid waste management and landfill proposal is addressed.
ultimately themselves, are free to
The debate surrounding private
review the draft plan and make versus public ownership of the procomments to the district policy posed fandfills surfaced in the early
committee, the thirty -one (31) stages of the development of this
appointed members responsible for draft plan. Public ownership was
an approved plan.
vetoed by the policy committee in
·
Following this "public comments favor of private ownership.
period", public hearings are schedAccording to the draft plan, our
uled on August 15, 16, 17, in each district produces six hundred (600)
of the six counties as a second tons of refuse daily. Each of the 3
' :opportunity to voice your opinion. landfills will be requesting permits
•.This "public review" period was to accept fifteen hundred (1,500)
: designed by the federal government tons per day, maximum landftlling
• as a result of public outcry for capacity. Givep these figures, 80%
greater citizen input in public poli- of the waste going to the district
landfills could be coming from outcy .
The districtf.olicy committee side-the-district
The contracts in the draft plan
hired an out-o -state consulting
fmn to produce the required draft discuss a set fee for district waste
plan. The cost for this extremely at $13.00 per ton. Eastern landfills
lengthy plan has grown to over currently charge as much as
$140.00 per ton and are closing'
$180,000.
As part of my continuing edu- rapidly. The potential profit genercation I have been serving as an ated from waste outside the district
Environmental Intern for the is I 0 times that of waste within the
Appalachian Ohio Public Interest district. This will not give the
Campaign (AOPIC) and have been waste disposal company much
assisting in the process of formaliz- incentive to regulate the out-of
ing AOPIC's public comments and state waste. If used to meet the
testimony regarding the district needs of the district, the three proposed landfills would have a 164
plan.
To complete this task, AOPIC years capacity or seven or eight
has assembled a "Solid Waste generations.
The private owner of a landfill
Management Plan (SWMP) Public
Comments Committee". This com- wants to maximize input of waste,
: mittee is made up of eight individu- close the fill and site a new facility .
: als .who have been following the This is contrary to the mandate to
· progress of this plan since the sign- H. B. 592 and the State objective
for decreased reliance on landfiUs.
: ing of H.B 592.
If we relinquish ownership of
· The members of AOPIC's public comments committee ts a the landfill we lose control over the
diverse group of individual and quantity of trash dumped in our
includes professionals involved in district. Ownership does not mean
: solid waste management, a Univer- the district authority runs the land: sity educator in geography, and a fill on a day to day basis. This goes
· retired geologist. Two members are to best bidder, with a good track
· active in local politics. Members of record and a sound management
··this committee l'lave attended the proposal.
It does mean that the district
district policy commiuee meetings
and have taken the time to read the controls what contracts the landfill
accepts. If the district does not conSWMD draft plan.
Through my involvement with tract for out-of-state waste, then no
this committees' review of the draft such waste can legally enter the
plan and my familiarity with H.B. landfill. In this way the public, by
592 I have come to the conclusion recycling, minimizes irs waste and
that our District draft plan falls the properly sited landfill will
short of the intent of the law and is serve, as mentioned above, for sevinadequate as a long range plan. eral generations. This is the intent
House Bill 592 clearly stares the ofH.B. 592
It is my opinion Southeastern
objective for the district SWMP as:
''To decrease the reliance on land- Ohio Solid waste Management Disfills",to plan for the district's regu- trict's draft plan is clearly not in
lation of its solid waste and to the public's best interest. I encourdevelop adequate landfill sitting age interested parties to review the
criteria that will protect public plan for themselves and gather
information to be able to particihealth and drinking water aquifers.
AOPIC's SWMP comments pate in this process.
A public hearing is scheduled in
committee has examined the draft
plan and identified major flaws in Gallipolis for 7 p.m., on August 17,
the draft plan. The most objection- 1991 at the Gallia County Senior
able a.spec!S are directly related to Citizens Center. We cannot allow
the already signed contracts for public policy to be implemented
three (3) new privately owned without significant input from the
public.
landfills in the district
Paul E. DeMuro
Each of these proposed landftlls
115 Franlclin "Ave.
have been exempted explicitly
Athens, Ohio 45701
from the proposed siting criteria.
Dear editor:

T~day

in history

By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Aug. I, the 213th day of 1991. There are 152 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Seven hundred years ago, on Aug. I, 1291, the Swiss Confederation
was formed.
On this date:
In I774, British scientist Joseph Priestley succeeded in isolating oxy·

---

Syrian VP snitches for the CIA
The brother
of Synan Prestdent Hafez Assad IS
a longume, clandesune smtch for
the Central Intelligence Agency.
feeding the CIA informa~on about
other countnes 10 the Middle East
ft!Kl passing back-channel informauon to Washmgton for Assad.
. The spy is Syrian Vice President
R1faat Assad, the younger brother
of the prestdent and the man most
likely to succeed Hafez Assad if he
ever s.teps down .
.
It •s almost unheard of 10 the
Arab world m recent Urnes for the
CIA to land a contact as htgh up m
government as Rifaat Assad, espectally m an Arab country ~uh a
htstory of hosule relauons w1th the
Umred States.
.
.
. Instea~ of conducting diplomattc negot1allons throu~h the State
Department, R1faat IS one vtce
president who takes his deals to the
CIA. He recently held discussions
wJth CIA officials about the
prospects for long-term. peace 10
the Middle .East and the smcenty of
hts brother s peace proposals. One
knowledgea~le source. said that the
globe-trott10g Rtfaat
was
"debriefed" on those matters at a
CIA safehouse m Maine.

. .

.

Rif~ IS loyal to his brother! but
very different from hun, and It Isn 't
clear whether Hafez always knows
what his brother is telling the CIA.
. Th~ Assads_are members of a
mmonty Mushm sect, the Alawites, who must use an iron ~st. to
keep control over the maJonty
Sunni Muslims.
R_tfaat bec~e the hatchet man
of htS brother s government m the
early 1980s. He led ~ovemme_nt
!Dihtary forces m quelli~g an upnsmg m the c•ty of Hama m F~bruary
1982 when a fundamentahst sect
tned t~ take over the cJty and _kill
Assad s sup~orters .. By the_llme
Rtfaat was ftntShed wtth the c•ty, at
least 10,000 ~pie were dead. .
He •s desp1sed b~ many SYJ:lans
for that, and for hts ost~ntauous
hfestyle that he flaunts 10 a poor
country. Hafez Assad leads an
ascetic life, but Rifaat loves luxury.
He has at least four wives and a
fortune of more_ th~ $1~ million.
He alternately hves m Pans, Gene·
va and other European cap1tals.
Knowledgeable sources say it
was Rifaat who first approached
the CIA about a proposed relauonship. This happened before the
summer of 1982, because the CIA

stepped in to smooth over some
trouble Rifaat had in the United
States that fall.
Through a front corporation in
August 1982, Rifaat bought a $1.1
million mansion in Potomac Md.,
the priciest suburb of Washi~gton.
Neighbors unaware of who the
new guy ...;as on the block. soon
began to count more than 40 burly
anned guards hanging around the
place and other strange goings on.
Then, in September, the fue department responded to a fire at the
house. The residents had already
fled, but fire investigators managed
to snag two maids hurrying out
with guns in briefcases. Inside, it
looked like Rifaat's men were prepared for what organized crime
syndicates call "going to the mattresses" _ hunkering down in a
house furnished with little more
than guns and mattresses to wait
for a gangland war.
Our sources say the CIA tried to
keep the incident under wraps
because of their growing relationship with Rifaat.
While he has received CIA gifts
and money Rifaat does not work
with the ciA for profit. He likes
the intrigue and the clout it gives

1..9•. 5... 0...

·

Will workers of future be happier?
I'll admit I didn'tlike it, but I
adjusted. ·I figured, this is the way
thmgs are these days, and at least
modern workers have jobs. My
father and mother, who lived
through the Depression with only
half a job, had reminded me of that
at least a bazillion times. So I just
got used to it.
Plants lay off older workers just
before they've had their 20 years in
so the company won't have to pay
them the retirement they'd planned
their futures around? Hey, I understand. It's nothing personal; just
business. "Bottom line, you know.
Stockholders, heh-heh. If we don't
show ~ decent profit this year, our
necks II be on the block, hee-hee.
Don't forget to tum in your washroom key on the way out."
Put more and more work on
fewer and _fewer workers, then
reduce our 10surance benefits? No
problem. We know there are new
college graduates willing to work
our jobs for lots less, because
you've brought them in and set
them right down next to us. And
you'd like us to sort of ignore the

labor laws, too, in the spirit of
being a team player? You got it. I
got a wife and three kids.
Then just when we're all getting
acclimated to fewer and fewer
employee rights, the business pages
start profiling businesses which are
becoming "worker-oriented,"
operating under the theory that
happy workers show up for work
and make great products. At the
Tandem Corp., there are Fridaynight beer parties. Wang Laboratories has abolished the "Us" and
''Them'' camps by letting any
employee who wants to attend any
company meeting. And - any of
you too comfortable with indentured servitude better stop reading
now, or risk a potentially healththreatening shock - the United
Services Automobile Association
has created a veritable employee
heaven of irs 286 flowering acres in
San Antonio, Texas.
There are tennis courts, jogging
trails, lighted softball fields, picnic
groves and a stocked fishing lake
for employees. In addition, there's
a steady stream of an and cultural

gen from air.
In 1790, the frrst United Stares census was completed, showing a populauon of nearly 4 million people in 13 states (including the regions of four
future states).
I~ 1834, an emancipation bill outlawed slavery throughout the British
emp1te.
In 1873, Andrew S. Hallidie successfully tested a cable car he had
designed for the city of San Francisco.
In 1876, Colorado was admitted to the union as the 38th state.
In 1907, the forerunner of the U.S . Air Force was established by the
army as an aeronautical division.
In 1914, German declared war on Russia at the onset of World War I.
In 1936, the Olympic games opened in Berlin with a ceremony presid·
ed over by Adolf Hitler.
In 1944, an uprising broke out in Warsaw, Poland, against Nazi occu·
pauon, a revolt that lasted two months before collapsing.
In 1957, the United States and Canada reached an agreement to create
the North American Air Defense Command, or NORAD.
In t~66. 25 y~ ~go, Charles Joseph Whitman, 25, shot and killed 15
people at the Uruvers11y of Texas before he was gunned down by police.
In 1975, a 35-nation summit in Helsinki, Finland, concluded with the
signing of an accord dealing with European security, human rights and
East-West contacts.
In I978, Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds, who had tied the National
League record of hit$g in 44 consecutive games, saw his streak end in a
game against the Atlanta Braves.
In 1988, Iran said it would honor an immediate cease-fJ.re in irs eightyear-old war with Iraq.
Ten years ago: Irish nationalist Kevin Lynch became the seventh
hunger-striker to die at the Maze Prison in Belfas~ Northern Ireland. The
rock music video channel MTV made its debut.
Five years ago: The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted, 15-2,
in favor of strict economic sanctions against South Africa to protest
apartheid.
One year ago: In Trinidad, dozens of Muslim militants surrendered and
freed 42 hosta~es they had seized six days earlier in a failed bid to overthrow the government .
.

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

him in the West. His brother has
not discouraged the relationship,
even at a lime when the Soviet
Union was the primary extern al
so urce of funding and arms for
Syria.
Some CIA officials became
uncomfortable with the relationship
after their dealings with Panama's
Manuel Noriega came to light. Tile
two men are similar in that Rifaat
has made money off drug running
in the Syrian-controlled Bekaa VaJ.
ley of Lebanon, and the information he gives the CIA is often of
dubious quality. But there is a difference between Rifaat Assad and
Noriega. Assad's past record 1s
more brutal.
ROGUES' GALLERY -We
once called Libya's Moammar
Gadhafi the worst dictator in the
world, and he invited us to Libya to
prove us wrong. We spent an
evening with him in a tent he
pitched behind his palace, and after
that evening, we were still con.
vinced he topped the list of the
world's worst dictators. Now it's
time to update the list. Saddam
Hussein is now at the top, followed
by Lt. Gen. Omar Hassan Ahmed
Bashir of the Sudan and Kim II
Sung of North Korea, and then
Gadhafi. Ethiopia's Mengistu Haile
was on our list too, until he had the
good sense to get out of his country
last May.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Th e
American Academy of Pediatrics
recently said that food ads aimed at
children should be banned from
television because kids are getting
fat. Whatever happened to "Just
say no"? Kids don't make out the
grocery lists, and they don't pay
the bills. If there's a box of cereal
in the house that is 50 percent
sugar, a parent probably bought it
becau se it was easier to give in
than to argue. Now the pediatri .
cians are say ing it 's easier to
deprive manufacturers of their right
to advertise than it is to say no to a
child. Let the food companies
advertise their junk food, and let
the parents buy something better.
The way we see it, the children
have no place in the transaction
until they are paying tlie bills.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Sarah Overstreet

exhibirs in the co~plex courtyard.By
a team of profess1onal counselors
·•
f
·
on call for employees' psychologi- don t feel a se~se .~ connectlo~
cal problems and a host of other and community .
Speakers
bure~us all ov~r ~e country are
amenities including a four-da
work week that's been in place fJ. sending f?rth mtssJOnanes to speak
20 years. Employee turnover is the on ~he vJitues -:&gt;f us10g humor m
industry low of 7
d bus10ess. exhortmg corporate ~
. __ w
percent. an
to lighten up. Even best-selhng
absenteeL&gt;••1 ent from double dig- business author and syndicated
•ts.two decades ago to below 2 per- columnist Tom Peters wrote recentcel!fhe business gurus are drum- ly that b~~inesses ~~ould realize
ming the same beat: James A. that the L:word -:- love Autry, president of the publishing w~rks m postuve, profitable ways
group that puts out Better Homes wtth both customers and employand Gardens magazine and Ladies· ees.
.
.
Home Journal, was in St. Louis
Whew, those new. phdosoph1es
recently to tell businesspeo le 10 were a lot for me to diges~ m such a
merge the words "love'p d short span of months. I m afratd
"profit," and they'd reap a :~d going from, "~~u're}ucky we, let
mine of good will and money. Nur- you work here to Gee, we ve
ture an atmosphere of trust and JUst. re-thunk the last20 years and
community in the workplace, decided !0 treat you as a valuable
where people can do good work, he commodity wh~ can only help the
said, and you'll see better results.
company tf you re happ~ ~~ keep
Someday, he told The Associat. getung better at your JOb may
ed Press, jobs will be more plenti· ~ause me stress. Hope my company
ful than workers and "peo 1 ill IS one of those that keeps psycholo.
•.
Pe w
gtsts on call
stm~ly not work 10 places where
(C)I99i .
NEWSPAPER
they re not well-treated, where they ENTERPRISE ASSN.

IMansfield I aa• I•
•! Columbus!

Veda Pickens
W. VA.

Flurries

Snow

A~Y

NUCLEAR EQUlPMENT
AROUNf.\ \\ERE?

\

NUCLEAR
WHAT?
I

.

South-Central Obio
Today, warm and sunny. High
around 90. West winds 5 to 15
mph. Friday, mostly sunny and hot.
High in the lower 90s.
Extended fore~:ast:
Saturday tbrougb Monday

Cloudy

C11191 Accu·Wooll1er. Inc.

A chance of showers and thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday.
Fair Monday. Lows mostly in the
60s on the weekend and mid 50s to
lower 60s Monday. Highs mid 80s
to lower 90s Saturday, in the 80s
Sunday and mid 70s to mid 80s
Monday.

Continued from page 1

Veda E. Pickens, 71, of Letart,
died Tuesday, July 30. 1991, at
University Hospital in Columbus,
OH.
Born October 22, 1919 in Letart,
she was a daughter of the late Willie E. and Addie 0. (Johnson)
Kaylor. She was a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death
by a brother and a sister.
Survivors include her husband,
Loyn Pickens of Letart; two sons,
James R. Pickens of Columbus, OH
and Francis Leroy Pickens of
Letart; a sister, Lorena Blake of
Letart; two brothers, William
Kaylor of Letart and Thomas
Kaylor of New Haven; five
grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.
Graveside service will be held
Friday, August 2, at II a.m. at the
Broad Run Cemetery with Rev.
George Weirick officiating. Burial
will follow at the cemetery.
There will be no visiting hours.

Squads respond to four calls

Mae Elizabeth Gibson

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to four calls for assiitallce.
On Wednesday at 2:59 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to
North Second Avenue for Thpmas Crow who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 5:55 p.m. the Rutland unit responded to Zion Church Road
for Shirley Morris who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Racine unit, at 8:16p.m. went to the Dravo Plant for Charles
Wolfe who was taken to Veterans.
On Thursday at 5:39 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Park
Street for Dorothy Bigalow, also taken to Veterans.

Mae Elizabeth Gibson, 50, of
Crown City, died TueSday, July 30,
1991, in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Born May 26, 1941 , in
Lawrence County, she was the
daughter of the late Willie and
Helen Edward Hesson. She was a
member of the Rome Church of
Christ.
. Surviving are her husband, Raymond E. Gibson; one daughter,

'

House approves bill for $38 million
for Gallipolis Locks and Dam project
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The House of Representatives
approved and sent to the Senate a
spending plan that includes $53
million for West Virginia dam projeers. officials said. This includes
funding for the construction of the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
The House voted 393-32
Wednesday to approve the plan
worked out by House-Senate conferees.
The measure was scheduled for
a Senate vote today, said Steve
Spina, spokesman for Rep. Nick
Joe Rahall, D·W.Va.
Rahall and Rep. Bob Wise, also
D-W.Va., said the bill contains $38
million for construction on the Gallipolis Locks and Dam on the Ohio
River and $15 million for work on
the Winfield Locks and Dam on the
Kanawha River.
"The action of the House means
that the Third District will continue
to lead the nation in the amount of
money spent on building locks and
dams," Wise said. "Such inland
waterway construction is vital to
river commerce throughout West
Virginia and that is essential to the
vitality of the state's economy."
Also included in the plan is
$190 million for the Appalachian
Regional Commission.
Other funding items in the bill
include:
-$81 million for flood control

A Dlvlllon of Multimedia, Inc.
PUblished t'Very afternoon, Monda y
through Friday. 111 Court St ., Po meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·

llshlng Company /Multimedia. Inc ..
Pomrroy. Ohio 4~769. Ph. 992·21:56. Se·
cond class ·postage paid a~ Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Membt-r: Th P Associated Press, In·

land .Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Nt"wspaper Association. National
Advertising Rt&gt;prt"5enrattve, Branham
NE'Wspa pt'r Sales. 733 Third AvenuE' ,
NE&gt;w York. NE&gt;w York 10017.

SUBSCRIP110N RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

On• Week .... .
On• Mon1h .....

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.... 25 Cen ts
Dall y .....

Subscribers not desiring to pay thecarrler may remit In advance direct to
ThP Dally St&gt;ntln£&gt;1 on a 3, 6 or 12 mont h
basts. Cred it will beglvPncarrlereach
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No subScriptions by mall permitted In
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-

Pr. Cloudy

---Local briefs....--.....,

POSTMASTER: Send addr.. s chang..
to ThE' Dally SPntlnt&gt;l. 111 COurt St ..
Pomt&gt;roy. Ohio 45769.

-

Sunny

----Weather forecast----

(USPS 14$-9!11)

BUDDY, SEEN

Ice

Via Associsled Ptess GtapN"Net

The DaHy Sentinel

"E~

go• I

By The Associated Press
The weather will be dry and
warm in Ohio today with plenty of
sunshine.
With plenty of sunshine today
temperatures will climb into the 85
to 90 degree range in most areas
but be around 90 in the far south.
Tonight readings will drop back
into the 60s statewide under a
mostly clear sky. Friday will bring
partly cloudy conditions to northem Ohio with a mostly sunny slcy
the norm for the south. It will be
warm to hot again Friday with
highs from the upper 80s to lower

90s.
Record high for this date was 97
in 1955 ; record low was 48 in
1952.
Sunrise Friday will be at 6:29
a.m.; sunset at 8:46p.m.
Around tbe nation
Rain dampened Oregon early
today and showers were forecast
across a wide swath of the northern
United States, with forecasters predieting rain in the West, hail in the
Rockies and thunderstorms in New
England.
Showers were also forecast for

Area deaths--

Showers T·sforms Rain

Mall Subocrlptlons
Inside Melp County
13 Weeks ........ , ....................... 121.84
26 Weeks ............ .................. ... $43.16
52 Weeks ..... ............... ........ ·.. 184.76
Outside Melli County

13 Weeks ................................ $23.40
l5 Weeks . ... .............................. $4~.:;o
52 Weeks ...........
............ $88.40

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

work on East Lynn Lake and the
Levisa, Tug Fork and Upper Cumberland rivers.
-$35.3 million to continue operating and maintaining U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers lakes and water
projects in West Virginia, including $14 .3 million for the Ohio
River Locks and Dams and $8.5
million for the Kanawha River
Locks and Dams.
-$1 million for a watershed project on Fourpole Creek near Huntington.
In March, Wise
testified before the House Appropriations Subcommiuee on Energy
and Water, requesting funding for
the water projectS in West Virginia.
In each case, his funding was
adopted frrst by the House on May
29 and now in the fmal conference

committee version of the bill. The
conference commiuee report is currently pending before the Senate
where final approval is expected as
well.
·
Funding for studies and investigations that are also pending
approval are $124,000 for the West
Virginia Comprehensive Navigation Study of the Ohio River
Waterfront and $995,000 for the
Kanawha River Navigation Study
for feasibility studies on the
Marmet and London locks.

Stormy Gale Gibson, at home; one
son and daughter-in-law, Raymond
Scott and Donna Gibson of Crown
City: three sisters, Virginia Garlic
and Margaret Wilgus, both of
Crown City, and Rosemary Callicoat of Apple Grove, Ohio; and
two grandchildren, Wesley and
Kristen Gibson of Crown City.
Services will be held 2 p.m. Friday, August 2, at the Beard Mortuary in Huntington with ministers
Bill Rhodes and Kevin Lombard
officiating.
Burial will be in the Crown City
Cemetery. There will be no visitation.

T.F. "Nick" Burleson
T.F. "Nick" Burleson, 78, of
Gallipolis, died Thursday, August
I, 1991 , at the Oak Hill Community Medical Center, in Oak Hill.
Arrangements
will
be
announced later by the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis.

Columbia...
Continued from page 1
could reshape Columbia's equity.
Filing bankruptcy will enable
the companies to reorganize their
finances and possibly break contracts that cnppled the firms by
forcing them to pay the higher
prices for natural gas.
"We ran out of cash. We hoped
we could work out some interim
financin~t. We really had to act in
what we felt was in the best interests of our shareholders," said
John H. Croom, chairman and chief
executive offJ.cer of Columbia Gas
Systems.
In the past month, Columbia has
suspended its dividend, cut salaries
and missed $83.5 million in pay·
menrs on short-term debt. Croom
said an approximately $33 million
debenture payment was due today.
Croom said the filing would not
affect service provided by the companies, and he said neither company is going out of business.
C. Ronald Tilley, Columbia Gas
of Ohio chairman and chief executive officer, agreed Wednesday that
the filing will have no impact on
operations in Ohio.

most of the Southeast coast, from
North Carolina to central Rorida.
Scattered showers were forecast
for pariS of Arizona, New Mexico
and Colorado, but the heavy rains
that hit much of the Southern Cali·
fornia desert Wednesday and
prompted flash flood warnings
were expected to subside.
Today's widely scattered rain
wasn't expected to do much to cool
temperatures. Highs were expected
to range from the 80s along the
East Coast, the Canadian border

Burge convicted; Judge Cox
to announce sentence today
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A arrest in April.
Prosecutors said Burge, who
former state Health Department
supervisor has been convicted of administered a program that hanembezzling $1.3 million from the dled refund checks from hospitals
across Ohio. spent the money on
state.
A Franklin Couaty Common himse lf, his wife and six women.
Pleas Court jury on Wednesday They contended that he bought the
found Frank Burge guilty of all six women gifts, including jewelry,
charges against him after two days cars and homes.
Burge did not testify in the trial,
of deliberation.
whtch
started July 22.
Visiting Judge Donald A. Cox
Conviction
on the charge of
of Gallia County said he would
sentence Burge today. Burge could en$aj!ing in a pattern of corrupt
acuvJty allows the prosecution to
be sentenced to 56 years in prison.
Burge, 47, was convicted of seek reimbursement for the state by
engaging in a pattern of corrupt confiscatina and selling Burge's
activity, aggravated theft and eight property.
Authorities already have seized
counts of theft in office. He was
or
frozen some of Burge's assets,
fired in May and had been jailed in
lieu of $300,000 bond since his including jewelry, homes, stocks
and cars.

_ _ Meigs Court news _ _
Divorces, dissolutions processed
A dissolution has been j!r&amp;nted
Divorce actions have ·been flied to Steven R. Quillen and Lmda D
·
in Meigs County Common Pleas Quillen.
Court by Terry L. Metheney.
Ewington. Beur Joanne Fetty,
Marriage licenses granted
Columbus, aga10st Richard L.
Marriage licenses have been
Fetty, Jr., Rutland; Lila Ridenour, granted to Vincent Lee Oliver, 30,
Long Bottom, against Keith Ride- Rutland, and Barbara Ann Stone
nour, also of Long Bottom; and 26, Middleport; ar1 to Willis~
Frank Randall Marnhout, Point Leroy Smith, 23, Reedsville and
Pleasant. W.Va., against Cheryl D. Peggy Lee BIessing, 18, al;o of
Mamhout, Racine.
Reedsville.
An action for dissolution has
been filed by Lana Jo Proffitt,
Judgment granted
Racine, and Dale Franlclin Proffitt,
A judgment has been granted to
Racine . .
Clara E. Davis, and others, apinst
The court has granted a divorce Home Nauonal Bank of Racmc in
to Theresa B. Good against the amount of $2,876.45.
De wayne Edward Good

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Jun·ior Hunt, Long Bottom ;
Charles Ellis, Pomeroy; and Donna
Williamson, Rutland.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
-None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, July 31 ·Dora Clay,
S tefanie Deem, Mrs. Kevin Fooce
and daughter, and Fonda White.
Births, July 31 - Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Coy, a daughter, Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. James Saunders, a
daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
Brent Wachs, a son, Gallipolis.

FRI.-SAT .-SUN .
Ed O'Neill in

DUTCH PG 13
AND
Sally Field, Kevin Kline.
Whoopi Golberg In

SOAPDISH PG 13
446·1088

-Meigs announcements--

terfield, pastor, invites the public.
Letart Trustees to meet
The Letart Township Trustees A covered dish dinner will follow
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the the service.
Fair project to be judged
office building.
Boy and Cub Scout projects for
Special speaker
Bennie S. Triplett. Overseer of the Meigs County Fair will be
the Church of God in Southern judged Saturday at I p.m. Projects
Ohio will be the featured speaker at can be left between noon and I
Continued from page 1
special services on Sunday at the p.m. Further information may be
Incumbent Republican Gov . Mt. Moriah Church of God in obtained by calling Lisa Roush or
George Voinovich will be joined Racine, Mile Hill Road. James Sat- Brenda Ncutzling.
by former Democratic Gov .
Ricllard Celeste and former Republican Gov. James ~- Rhodes at a
ribbon-cutting ceremony marking
the opening of the event that showcases the best of Ohio's agriculture,
THURSDAY, AUGUST I, 1991
crafts and music.
"Kiwanis Youth Day"
The All Ohio State Fair Band
and Youth Choir and Jackie Lee
Show Arena
7:00p.m. Youth Project Awards Presentation
Kemp, the 1991 Ohio State Fair
Parade of Champions
Queen, also will participate in the
Dairy Sweepstakes
ceremony.
Pulling Track
Pony
Pulling Contest
7:30p.m.
Among more than 77,000
Main Stage
Lorrie
Morgan
8:00p.m.
exhibits and attractions at the fair
will be butter sculptures of military
FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1991
figures saluting the American Flag,
pig races, alligator wrestling and
10:00 a.m. Pretty Baby Contest
Main Stage
the annual livestock Sale of ChamSponsored by the Gallipolis Jr. Women's Club
pions. Fairgoers will get a chance
12:30 p.m. 33rd Annual Market Lamb Sale
Show Arena
to win a Vietnamese jlOtbeU•ed ptg
I
:30
p.m.
31st
Annual
Market
Hog
Sale
Show Arena
or take a look at AI Capone's 1930
2:00p.m.
Full
House
Blue
Grass
Main Stage
Cadillac.
3:30p.m. 40th Annual Market.Steer Sale
Show Arena
5:00p.m. 9th Annual Tobacco Sale
Show Arena
7:00p.m. Full House Blue Grass
Main Stage
7:30p.m. OSTPA Sanctioned Tractor Pull
Pulling Track
9:00p.m. Full House Blue Grass
Main Stage
Am Ele Power .................. 29 5/8
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 3/4
AT&amp;T.............. .................. 39 3/4
Bob Evans ........................ 18 1/8
Pomeroy
Charming Shop.................. 22 1/2
City Holding ..................... 13 3/4
Hours:
WI NOW
Federal Mogul... ................17 1/8
U am to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.
HAVE
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .38
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.
DIET PEPSI
Key Centurion .................. 14 3/4
Lands' End ....................... 19 1/8
Limited Inc ...................... .30 1/8
Multimedia Inc ... .............. 28 3/4
Rax Restaurant.. .............. .17!32
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 31
Shoney's Inc ..................... .16 1/4
Star Bank ..........................22 3/4
Wendy Iitt'I....................... IO
Worthington Ind ...............26 3/4

138th...

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524
'

Stocks

992-2124

FOUR FREE
PLASTIC DESERT STORM CUPS
With Purchase of A
Large Deluxe Pizza
dttw••

•1111 Domino'• Plrn, In~. Our
o•'Y 1. . tMn 120.00. Deltflf'f • • Hmited to
tnluN IIIIo clrtvlng. V.. ld at ,.moJtetlnt IOOitiOft onfW . Ill• t• .. Cf ld~ wfllfl
opple.W.. PAfiJTTIME -ND CAIIIIIIII OIIPORTUNITI!I NOWAVAILAIUI

. • ' . "'

'&lt;

Tf

~
I' Wf 'l'

$3.00

13.110

BARGAIN M!TINEES SATURDAY &amp;SUNOAY
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY

NOW PLAYING
TODAY 7:20 ,9 :10
FR IDAY 7:20,9: 10

SAT . 1 '20,3' 10,7 '20.9' 10
SUN . 1 '20 .J ' 10 .7 '2 0. 1' 10
,ON. • THUIIS.7,20.UO

_,( ..~II!
::
.~~
...

.

Gallia County Fair Schedule

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes prtJvilltd by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewl of Gallipolis.

states and Pacific Northwest, to the
90s in the South, topping out at 100
or more in much of the Midwest,
Texas, Arizona and California.
Wednesday was a scorcher
across much of Texas. The high of
99 in Corpus Christi broke a 14year-old record for the date by I
degree, while the high of 103 in
San Antonio matched a reco~ for
the date reached in 1912 and 1948.
The high for the nation Wednesday was 112 degrees in Laredo,
Texas.

KEVIN COSI."NEII

RDBIN"'Hooo
~ (»

fHIE\oe

:Ponj o ,
flO 'oUUS . ICI IAJCAIJI NIGHT .

TOOAl 7'00
FRIDAY 7:00

SAnJADM 1,00,1 ,00
SUNDAY 1,00 ,1,00
. - THUR .7·

Orand Opening Sale
AUGUST 1st • 3rd

By The Way Grocery
LANGSVILLE, OHIO - 742-2170
Colby Cheese ........................................... s1.99 lit.
Boiled Ham ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••• S2.49 111.
Swiss Cheese .............................................S2.89 •·
Pickle loaf .•.••.•.......••...••.••....•.••••.••.••••.••.• s2.4911t.
Little Debbie Cakes .;••••••••••••••~!P:.!~: ..~~:..... 5/S 1
Valley Bell 2% Milk ••• ,.......................... s1. 99 gat.
PEPSI PRODUCTS
.
.
12 Pak................ S2 •99 2 Uter Btl.............. S1.09
Register for 2 Gifts to be given
away Saturday, August 3.
Bust a Balloon for Dally Specials
WE NOW ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS

~--- ··--

---

�Thursday, August 1, 1991

The Daily· Sentin·el

Sports

Cincinnati posts 5-1 victory over Chicago Wednesday
By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The

Thursday, August 1, 1991
Page-4

Cincinnati Reds are temporarily
without center fielder Eric Davis
and reliever Rob Dibble as they try

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

PhUadolpNa, 6; CandiClo. Houston, 6;
Felder, San Francilco, 6; v .. Slyke,

ruuburah. '-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut.n Dl~lllon
Team
W L Pet.
PriTSBURGH II 39 ·"'
New Yod&lt;
....... 55 45 .550
SL Lc.w.
.......... 53 47 .530
Cbica8o
......... 41
.480
Monu.ol
......... 43 57 .430
Philaddpbia ....... 42 51 .420

sz

GB

5.5
7.5

12.s

17.5
II .S

Wtsltrn Dlvll&amp;on

Team

W L P&lt;L

GB

U. Anpea ......
Atlanla
...........
CINCINNATI •
San Fnncioco ......
Son Diego ........
Houston
.........

58
53
49
41
48
41

4.5
8
9.5
I 0.5
17

42 .580
46 .~35
49 .Sot
S! .485
S! .475
59 .410

noME RUNS - Jobn.lon, Now Y edt,
22; Mau Williama, San Pranciaco, ll;
Gmt. Atlanlll , 20; 0 . Bell. OUcaao, 10;
W. Clark, San Fnnciaco, 19; McOriff,
San Diqo, 19; Mitcholl. San Franciaco,
19.
STQLEN BASES - Ni1on, Allanu.,
58; Ori11om, Montrcal, 47; OcShiold a,
Monue.L. 41 ; Coleman, New Yorlr., 34;
Bo~dl, Pltllburall, Jl; Lanlt(ord, St.
._...., 29; Bullor, U.A....... 7J.

PITCHING (9 de&lt;:iuonl) - RIJo,

ClndMtl~ 7-Z, .771, :U7; Walk, PUllburp, 7-2, .771, 3.15; R. Martin... Lao
Anaclu, 14-5, .737, :z.2.5; Olavine, At·

lanta, 14-5, .737, 2.25; Huut., San Diqo,
12·5, .706, ! .IS: c"'~""'""· SL t.ouio, 7· 3.

.700, 4.72; Avery, Atlanta, 11 -S, .687 ,

3.48.

STRIK.EOUI'S - Cone, New York,

Wednesday's scores
Clndnnad .5, Chb:aa 1
Atil&amp;ddpbia 9. San Di• 3
Atlanla 8, Pllllburah
u....... 9, SL J..ouio 5
LoaAnplca6, New YOlk 3

T

•

Tonlgbt's games
Su fnntlno (McClellan 1-1) al
Clndnnad (Oro. 4-1), 7:35p.m.
Philadelrthia (Mulhollond 9-10)" Man·
tt..J (~or 5-7). 1;35lm. ·
Plllaburih (T'""IIn ·3) II SL Loub
(OIIvans 3-3), 1;35 p.m.

Friday's 2ames
San Francbco (BlaCk 1-8) at Clndn·
na~l (Myen 4-8), 7:35p.m.
Philtdclphia (Cox 3-4) al Monuea. l
(DenniJ Mutin,. I Hi), BS p.m.
S~n Diego (Hunt 12- S) at Atlant•
(Leilnndt 9·9), 7;40 p.m.
Chic110 {Bielecki 11-7) at New Yoft
(Gooden !1-6), 7;4()pm.
Lao Angclea (Ojeda 8-S) " Houston (1.
Jme~6-7) , 8:35 f .m.
Pl1ltbur1h (Z. SmUh 10·8) al St.

: HAPPY PUTTERS-Tri-County Junior golfers closed out another season Monday with the final
roilnd of the Junior Tour. Shown above are several players who made it to the 18th hole. Front row, left to
right, are Trent Tolliver and Trent Roush; second row, left to right: Scott Hussell, Jeremy Vickers, Steve
Deweese and Clay Crow; third row, lert to right: Tim Peterson, David Anderson, Josh Carpenter, Gabe
Scott, Jeremy Tucker, Jason King, J.R. Hysell, Chris Yonker and Jason Fraley; back row, left to right:
Jason Hart, Adam Krawsczyn, Zackary Pullin and Corey Miller. (Photos courtesy of Jan Haddox).

Leull (DeLeon 5-I), 8:35p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~ocal

golfers receive honors

By Frank Capehart
:·
:: Physicals for football and other
Fall sports are underway th1s week,
.00 the pigskin participants will be
hllfd at It beginning next Monday
~ the summer winds down and
SChool sports swing in. In quick orller now, as the final month of what
\ilas known as "summer vacation"
P.Jays out, scholastic sports actually
5iart their regular seasons well
)l.efore classes begin in the schools.
Resides football practices daily,
~nd then regular season games the
final week of August, Ohio Golf
~ going early in the month, and
f,'Ot Virginia High School Golf
tititiches will be underway shonty
~fter the middle of the month:
~ight or wrong agree or disagree,
ihe "summer vacation" will soon be
just one of no classes, but one of
tegular practice and competition.
Enjoy what is lef~ for a couple of
breaths from now, it is back to tho
~:lassroom . Wow, how time Hies.
•· However, before the vacation
Comes to an end, there is a
whirlwind of late events to put a
brilliant ·end to the busy summer.
The month long County Fair circuit
lias now begun in the local area and
provide superb weeks of final
run for all of us. Last week was
Jackson County, this week is the
pallia Fair, next week is the Mason
C:::ounty Fair, and the following
week is Meigs County Fair week.
~fter that, two weeks of State Fairs
illld school is here. Quite ' fast
Onish, wouldn't you say, especially
ift ·light of the schoolboy sports

will

I

o ,

which crowd into the act.
Meantime. the summer sports
programs are swiftly closing down.
Lit~e League diamond sports, Gals
sports and the like are already into
tourney times and their li'ophies are
signaling the end of those series.
On the Golfing front, most summer
programs for youth are concluding
in what becomes part of the closing
of pne and the start of another,
Seems like each season has that
closing-starting time, just as it
should be in the never ending world
. of sports activities.
Monday, at Hidden Valley Golf
Course, the Tri-County Junior Tour
closed out another banner season
for all youth linksters, and they did
it with a bang. While the chase for
age group crowns had ended two
weeks prior at Cliffside, the competiton and strokemaking was keen
once again in the only 18 hole
round played by the youth during
the Tour. Food, fun, trophies and
prizes mixed with the golfing on
what turned out to be a marvelously
delightful day to produce some of
the best scores and most fun of the
year.
In the premier 15-17 age group
of the "oldest" juniors, regular tour
champ, Steve Deweese, shot even
par on the front nine and finished
with a fine two-over 74 for the low
gross score of the day. Just three
strokes back with the second best
of the day was Mark Georgi, also
of Point, then Bill Tawney of Gallia, Jay Harris of Meigs, and Jay
Cremeans of Meigs as all three
counties found their blossoming

stars tightly bunched with nice
scores. During the four week
regular tour, Deweese had finished
first, Harris second and Cremeans
third. This day, Scott Whi~ach of
Meigs turned in one of his best and
earned the low net award, while
Meigs golfer Tim Peterson did the
same and garnered second. Low
Net just ahead of Jeremy Vickers at
third Low Net. Harris picked up the
Low Putts award for the day. Also
battling close behind the leaders
were Phil Hovatter. Curtis
Capehart, Jason Swain, Brent Sang
and Chris Knight.
The 13-14 age bracket once
again was a battle between the two
top leaders of the regular tour, just
as it had been all season. However,
this time Tour runner-up Jason Hart
edged regular season champ Adam
Krawsczyn by two strokes and
Jason carried off the Low Gross
award for the day, with Adam in
second. Corey Miller of PP had his
best of the year and captured the
Low Net score for the day, while
Gabe Scott of Riverside and Chris
Smalley of PP were second and
third net winners. Chris Yonker of
Riverside earned the low putts
award. During the regular season,
Krawsczyn was the champ, Hart
was second and Scott Hussel was
third in the group. Behind the
award winners this day, others included Hussell, Aaron Riley, JD
Holstein, Chris Carpenter, Jason
Collins and Rich Gilkey.
Season Champ, Jason King , did
it again in the 11 -12 age group as
he posted an 86 to win the Low
Gross award this day. However. it
was a battle as Jeremy Tucker
chased his Riverside mate and was
a bare two strokes behind, finally
winning the Low Net award.
Second Low Gross then went lD
seasonal runner-up J. R. Hussell
while second and third Low Net
came to Clay Crow and David Anderson of Meigs. James See of
Mason won Low Putts, while JUSt
behind the award winners were
Tyson Evans, Matt Hill and Josh
Carpenter. During the season, Anderson and Cliffside's Adam Bush
tied for the third spot.
In the youngest group of ten and-under, Trent Roush fired the
best score of the day to capture
Low Gross, while seasonal champ
Zack Pullin was right behind and
grabbed the Low Net award. Trent
Tolliver of PP was right behind
them and won second Low Gross,

Tum
Toronto
Deaoit

Each year, the Tri-County Tour
awards lD the young swingers a
special "Golfer of The Year" plaque. It goes to the swinger who accumulates the greatest number of
points during the entire season of
competition events and is named
the Parker Long Memorial award.
Parker Long was the first champ of
the Tri-County Tour, and was tragically killed in an auto accident a
year later. This year, the winner of
the prestigious award was Adam
Krawsczyn, as he just edged out
Steve Deweese by a narrow margin
of two points. Restricted to the two
older age groups now, the new
Parker Long recipient had three
others. Jay Harris, Frank Capehart
and Curtis Capehart, on hand to
applaud the presentation.
So, it was another fine conclusion to another very exciting
season. Thanks go out to all the
participanl~. to the four local
courses and officials, to the parents
and to all who have helped make
the year and the Tour a marvelous
learning experience for the young
golfers. After the presenta~on, the
close was "Until next year" and so
we all look forward to them.
For now, enjoy the days ahead,
give thanks to the Lord fur all we
have and enjoy. take time to smile a
lot, hug the kids and have a gread
day.

POMEROY HEALTH CARE
224 EAST MAIN • POMEROY, OH.

992-6418 or 992-6588

THOMAS
SPENCER, D.O.
•
Receiving Patients
Starting August 5

New York
Milwauk.cc

·. • LINING UP THE PUTI-J.D. Holstein lines up the putt Monday
durilll ftll8l rouad play in the '13-14 age bracket or the Tri-County
Jlaaior Tour at Hidden Valley Golf Course. Pictured along with
Holstein from left are Chris Carpeater, Corey Miller and Aaron Riley.
Miller bad bis best game or tbe year, capturing Low Net score or tbe

i.y.
'

Pc:L
.569
.510
.4so

.474
.430
Baltimore
........ 40 60 .400
CLEVELAND
33 " .333
We~tern

Dlvlllon

Twn

W L Pet.

Minneaotl
.......
Chicago
.........
Oakland
.........
fp,u
...........
Se~ulo
...........
Calilomi• .........
!Uruaa City .......

61 41 .598
51 43 .570
5(i 46 .549
52 45 .536
S4 4i .529
52 48 .520
49 50 .495

GB
6
'
9.5
14
17

13.5

GB
3

5
6.5
7
8
I 0.5

Wednesday's scores
Minnoacu 12,Now Yod&lt; 3
801tm 11, Oakland 10, 14 innin&amp;s
Deuoi13, Caill'Dia 1
ToroniO 3, Cle•etaod I
Chic:lao tO, T~u 8
K.msu City S, Milwaukee4
B.ttim-4. S..nlo 2. II innin&amp;a

Today's games

6-lt) at Toronto
(Juan Guzman 3-2), 12:35 p.m.
Minnoa&lt;U (P. Abbott J.O) at New Yod&lt;
(Cadanl 3-4), I p.m.
.
.
Cleweland (Nil)'

California (Fc:uen 0-1) at Dc:uO.t (Lcit·
" 2-2), I ;35 pm.
.
Kansu City (Boddick.er t -7) at Milwau kee (Huntet 0-4), 2:35p.m.
Oakbnd (Show 1-2) at Bo1ton (Gardiner J.S). BS p.m.
Texu (B. Witt 3·3) at Oticago (Garcia
H). 8;05 p.m.

American Leaeue
BATTING - Palmeiro, Teua, .336;
Boa&amp;~, Botton, .335; TanabuU, Karu:u
City, .332; P\lck.cu, Minnc.Oll, .332; C.
Ripkcn, Bahimoto, .325; Molitor, Nilwaukee, .325; Franco., Tent, .324.
RUNS -c....... Ookland. 77: Moll·
tor, Milwaukee., 75; Palmclro, Tw.a , 13;
Whi~e, Toron10, 70:
Chicos•· 69;
Franco, TClU, 69: C. Riplm, Balumore,
68; D. Hendmon, Oakland, 68; R. Hen·
dcnon, Oakland, 68.
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 85; Cnaeco,
Oakland, 14; Thcmu, Chieaao. 71; Sierra , Ter.u, 72; Joe Carter, Toronto. 72:
Gonz.alcz.. Tuu. 70; C. DIYil, Minneao-

n..m.u.

u,69.
IDTS - Palmciro, T"•· 132; Pucl&lt;eu,

OOUBLES - R. Alomu, Toronto, 31;
Boggs, 801ton, 31 ; Palmeiro, Teiu, 29;

.'
~~

-11:S..~

~ajorleagueleaders

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

22; ro-, De&lt;roi~21.

STOLEN BASES - R. Henderson,
Oakland. 34: Raine~. Oricaao. 33; R. Alomar, Toronto, 32; Polmia, California, 30;
Cuyler, Deuoit, 24; White, Toronto, 23;
Franco, Te1u, 22.
PITCHING (9 deciliona) - ErickJm,
Minnc:~oca , 14--3, .824, 234; Henneman,
O...Oi~ 8-2, .800, 2.66; Klink, Oollind.
7-2. .778, 2..63; Kru~ger•.Seatlle, 9-3.
.750. 2.71; Finley. Califo11111. 14-5..737,
3.91 ; Lanaaton, California, 14--5, .137,
3.48; McDowell, Chicago, 13· 5, .722,
3.08.
S'I1tJKEOUTS - R. Johnson, Seltlle,
148; Ryan, Tcxu, 145; Ocmcna, Boston,
,142; McDowell, OU.cago, 122; Swindell,
Cle¥eland,ll1; Finley, Califom.i1, 122;
Lanalton. Califomia, 122
SAVES - Aguilera, Minneaota, 27;
Eckenlcti:Oakland, 21; Harvey, California, 25:
·
, Chic~go, 24; Reardon,
Borton, 2A; bm, BllllltloR, 22; Henke,

J

Tormto, 21 .

Transactions

'"'" .99:=
' zg·s·.......

BasebaU
Amerkln Leaaue
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Plated
Rudy Sunez, pllcher, on the 15-day

59

d!Pbled I~L
OAKU.ND A11li.EI1CS - Acq.w.d
Ron Darlins. pia.cher, !run the Monli'Cll
Expo~ for Mlu Oron and Ruuell Coanier, pia.chcra.
National J.eaaue
HOUSTON ASTROS - Tr~dod Jim
Clancy, pitcher, to the Atlanta Bnves for
Matt Turner, pitcher, and 1 player to bt
named later.
UJS ANGELES DOIXIERS - Tnded
Mike Hutlcy, pitcher, and Braul.io Cutil·
lo, ootficldct, to the Philldelphia Phillia:
for Roger McDowell, pitcher.

....

.

FootbaU
National Football Ltaaue

CINCINNATI BENGALS - Slaned
Mike Dlnale, runnlna back.
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Signe&lt;i
Chuck Webb, running back, 1nd Chuck
Cecil, aaf~y . Waived Joey Hester, punlCr.
Pllccd Elslon Ridgle, deferuive lineman,
oo lhe waivcd·injurod JUt.
HOUSTON OILERS - Agreed to
temu with Cody Cullon, quartnback, on
a lwo-yearconlncL
NEW YORK GIAI'ITS - Signed !11·
rod BIDich, l'ullbacl&lt;, '"d John Wuhing·
ton, de.fcn~ivc lineman, to lhreo-yar contn&lt;U.

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Rcl.,ae&lt;l

3~~

I'IIIIIIIIF
Doflllrl
foreign oi domestrc

Roland Polcl, nmning back.

Hockey
National Hockey Leape
CIDCAGO BLACKHAWKS - SilllCd
JUitin Lafayette, left win&amp;. and Rob C'oon,

"t1~\soTA

NORTH STARS Nunod Bob Hotl'meyer c.o~ch of Kallm•·
zoo of lhc International Hockey l.eaJUe.
NEW YORK RANGER S - t&gt;f•me&lt;i
M.aftin Maddm ICOUL

'2"'"', •• _,
14Dff
ltlllf
JIIIIII'Cifll
1 YR W~RR~HTY

Constant dialing Ia probably unhealthy. say scientists at the University of Penn!lylvanie. Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta
,auggeat that lack of exercil8 il more of a health problem than
obesity. With exercil8, health Improves and weight may go
down. too.

"-!IIIII

beep! Serpenllnt
BeMs- $1 oN

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstor
Samsung
Soundesign
Zenith

Funai
Symphoni'
ICTV
Phii(O

Emerson
Shin tom
Multi Tech
Scott

Sylvonia
Magna vox
GE
RCA

WE REPAIR .ALL MAKES
Konn_., ~... ll.l'li.
Cll.telllftl .. 11.
llonlld liMning. II.Ph.
Mon. llwu lot. 1:00 o.m. to 1 ;00 p.m.
· au.., 10:00 o.m. to 4;00 p.m.
PREICRIPTIONI
PH. 812·2111
E. Moln
Friondly .......
Pomoroy, OH.

.....

~

llflllrl
lorergn or domesl+c

Breau cancer riak goaa up with a high intake of saturated fat and
down with a high intake of vitamin C. according to a statistical
study rapor1ad in the Journal of the National Cancer lnstitutlt.

When good naw products become available. you'll find them at
Swisher-Lohae Pharmacy . Make us your health headquarlllro.

hf!l'

'I DOFF

Old wives' tale coma true: doctors at Coombe Lying-In Hospital
in Dublin. Ireland, found that it does indeed take longer to deliver
a large baby than a small one - an average 7. 7 hours of Iabo rfor a
10-pound tyke va. 3.8 hours for thol8 under 6Y2 pounds.

New product Ia uld to reduce gas and bloating from beans, cabbega, and other problem fooda. Naturally derived enzyme break a
down indigestible augers while they're atilt in the stomach so that
they won't "explode" In the gut .

t

to get back into the Nationa't April 28 and hit a fan, injuring her these four games behind me and
Doctors took blood samples'
League West race. But right-hander elbow.
get ready for the Dodgers," Dibble Wednesday from Davis as they try
Jose Rijo is providing some wel''I'm going to go ahead and get said.
(See NL on Page 6)
come incentive.
Dibble began a four -game,
National League-imposed suspension Wednesday night and Davis
missed a second consecutive start
because of a mysterious mdlaise
that has had him feeling sluggish.
But Rijo (7-2) pitched and hit
the Reds to victory, driving in the
frrst two runs with a bases-loaded
single and limiting the Chicago
Cubs to six hits over seven innings
of the 5-1 triumph. It was Rijo's
second start since missing five
weeks with a chipped ankle.
"It'&amp; good to see•Jose pitch as
well as he did," Reds second baseman Bill Doran said. "He's an
awful important part of our ballclub. I think everyone will agree,
it's good to have him back."
The Reds managed a modest
two-game sweep of the Cubs to
start a 10-game homestand in
which Cincinnati hopes to uy to get
back into the divisional chase or
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
It is a daunting task. The Reds
have slipped to third place, losing
15 of 19 games before Wednesday's victory.
The Reds resume NL West play
toni~ht with the frrst of four games
agamst San Francisco . Then,
Cincinnati is host for four games
with the Dodgers.
Dibble, second in the National
League ·with 23 saves, is serving a
suspension that will cost him all
but the last game of the San Francisco series. NL president Bill
Doran slides in for tbe attempted steal in tbe .
OUT AT SECOND- Chicago shortstop
White imposed the penalty and a
third inning of Wedesday night's game in
Sbawon Dunston (left) lays the leather on the
$1,000 fine because Dibble threw a
Cincinnati,
which the Reds won 5-1. (AP)
Reds' Bill Doran for the out at second base as
ball into the stands after a game on

Joe Caner, Toronto, 29; C•nscco, Oak·
Toroa10, 26; C. Ripken,
BaltimDt0,26.
TRIPLES - Molitor, Milwaukee, 9; R.
Alomu, Taranto, 7; Poloni1, California,
7; White, Toronto, 7; ~en, MinnC$01.1 ,
6; KnoDiauch , Minnuota, S; McRae,
Kanus City, 5; Whiten, Cle~eland, 5;
Devc:te~IU, Baltimore. 5; Raines. Chica·
go,5.
HOME RUNS - F1elder, Deuoit, 29;
ChliCCo, Oakland, 28; JoCatter, Tormto,
23; C. D1vi1 , Minnesota, 23; Tarubull,
Kamas City, 22; C. Ripker!, Baltimo",

National League
BAlTING - PmdlelOn, Allanta, .337;
Nixon , Athnu , .337; T. Gwynn , San
Diego, .333; Morrla, Cl.nd.nnatl, .311;
Jose:, St. Louis, .31S; Btgpo. Houl ton ,
.310; Calderon, Monor.al, .309.
RUNS - Butler, Loa Angelea, 71;
Johuoo. New Yori., 68; Sandbtra. Cn.iCI·
ao 67· J. Bell, Plttaburah, i"J; Van
Sljke,' Plttabureh, 63; 0 . Smith, St.
Louia , 63; Gana, Allanl.l, 62; Pendleton,
Al.lanu, 6l.
RBI - W. Clark, San Fnncilco, 74 ;
Bond.l PIUtbllr&amp;h, 74; John•on, New
York. 7t; Dawaon, OticaJO, 68; G. BcU,
Chicaao. 65; Bonilla, ~Uuburah, 64;
Matt Williams, San Ft~nctKO, 62.
HITS - T. Gwynn, San Diego, 134;
Buller Lol An&amp;de.s, 116; Samuel, Los
An&amp;cl~, liS; J&lt;*o St. Louia, 11,2; Sandbc:tJ, Chicaao, Ill: Pendleton, Allanla,
110: c.Jderon. Monaeol, 109.
.
DOUBLES - Joae, St. Lou11, 30;
Morrlt, Cincinnati, 15; Bonilla, PIUaburah. 15; McReynolck, New Yotk, 2S;
Gull, Atlanta, 23; Pa!.dldon, Allanu, 23;
Zcilc , St . Louia, 22; T . Gwynn , San
Di'l•· 22; Sondbaa, au.., •.22 .
TRIPl.BS - T. Owynn, San Oiqo, 9;
Lankford, St. Loui1 , 8; L. Gonzalez,
Houaton, 6; F'mlcy, Howton, 6; K.rut,

·•
.~~

!ond, 26; While,

Friday's games
Toronto (Candioui 9· 10) at Boaton
(Oc:mcnall -7), 7:35p.m.
KtnDJ Clly (Gublcu 6-5) al Cltn·
land (Swlodill ..,~ 7;35 ~·
New Ya:k (Kami.enlccki 4- 3) at Detroit
(Ttnana 7-7), 7:3S p.m.
Baltimore (McDonald 4-5) at Chie~go
(Femond.,. 5·7~ 8;()5 pm.
Teua (Bohanon 0-0) at Milwaukee
(Nmao 8· 8), 8;35 p.m.
Seattle (Holmlll 9- 10) at California
(Abbott 9-7), 10;35 p.m.
Minneaot• (Morris 13-7) at Oakland
(Wol&lt;h 8-6), JO,Js p.m.

OPEN:
MONDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
8 am-12 noon and 1 pm-5 pm
TUESDAY l!t THURSDAY
10 am-12 noon and 1 pm-8 pm
FRIDAY 8 am-12 noon and 1 pm-4 pm
SATURDAY 8 am-12 noon
Appointments or Walk-Ins Welcome

L
44
49
s2
....... 46 51
...... 43 57

a..... . . . . .

FINISHING
UP
THE
TOUR-Teenage golfers from
Mason, Gallia, and Meigs
counties finished up the last holes
of the 1991 Tri·Counly Junior
Tour, Monday, at Hidden Valley
Golf Course. Above, Steve
Deweese, this year's winner in
the 15-17 age group, puts it in the
pocket while Jay Harris and Jay
Cremeans, both of Meigs, and
Mark Georgi watch. AI right,
Tim Peterson of Meigs County
prepares to finish up the putt
during golf action in Monday's
final round or the 15-17 age ·
bracket of the Tri-County Junior ....-~
Tour. Peterson's game was good
enough to garner him second in
1\is
division
behind Meis
Countian Scott Whitlach. Shown
with Peterson from Jert are Chris
Knight, Brent Sang, Jason Swain
and Bill Tawney of Gallia
County.
while Matt Tarbell won Second
Low Net and Jason Farley won
Low Putts for the day. Dunng the
season, Zack Pullin was the champ,
Radley Faulk of Meigs was runnerup, and Trent Roush of Riverside
was third.

W
......... 58
........... Sl
41

144; Gooden, New Yotk, 128; t51avine,
Atlanta, 127; 0 . Maddux, Chicago, 127;
Hamilch, Hounoa, 102; Bonca, San
Dicwo. 99; Hum, San J:?lcso. 97. .
SAVES - Leo Snuth, St. Louu, 27;
Dibble, Clnclnutl, 13; F,.neo, New
Yom, 21 ; Mitch WilliAma. Atil&amp;dclphia.
19; Left'au, San Dieao, 16; JUpcui, San
Fnncisco, 16; o... ifmilh. ou..1o. 16.

Minnuou, 132; Molitor, Milwaukee,
131; C. Ripkcn, Baltimore, 130; Sierra ,
Ttxu, 123; Franco, Tuu, 122; R. Alomar, T020nto. 119.

£adem Dlvlalon

.'Round the county ...

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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391 'W~ST MAIN STREET
992-3524

POMEROY, OHIO

limit

due' to

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store houra: 8;30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondlly through Frtay,
8:30 1.m. to 7 p.m ..Saturday, 1nd Sle.m. to 5 p.m. Sundly

GALLIPOLIS
Prlc"

..•

,..~w,-_:;,o:
7, 1M1

II

�The Dal

Sentinel

Key, Blue Jays end four-game
losing streaks by beating Tribe
TORONTO (AP) - A change
1n mcc hamc s and the Cleveland
lnd1ans proved to be JUSt the nght
med1cmc for J1mmy Key.
In hiS e1ghth try for his lith VIC tory, Key scanered SIX hils over
c1ght mmngs as th e Toronto Blue
Ja ys end ed a four- game lo s1 ng
streak w1th a J- 1 victory over the
lnd1ans.
"'I was commg across the s1de
of my body 1nstead of commg over
the top," Key sa1d . " When I do
that my smker doesn' t sink and 1t
makes ll harder ID co me ms1de on
nght-handed hillers. If enough people tell you that you're domg somethmg wrong, eventually you're
g01ng to p1ck up on 11 "
Key (11 -6) snapped a personal
four -game lo smg streak datm g
back to June 13 when he posted a
1-0 complete-game victory over the
Indians. It kept th e Blue Jay s S IX
games up on the Detroit Tigers m
the AI East. The T1gers beat CahfomJa 3- 1 on Wednesday mght.
" If I'd thrown the way before
against those gu ys ton1ght , they
would have killed me, " sa1d Key ,
8-1 agam st the lnd1ans 1n hi s
career . "'If they ha ve n't been
swinging the bat well, it's news to
me. I thought I pllched as well as I
have all season."
Key struck out four and walked
one before giving way to Tom
Henke, who struck out two m a
perfect ninth for his 21st save in as
many chances.
''The routine was the key for
me tomght," Henke srud. "That's
just the ideal situation for me to
come in, face three guys in the
ninth and get out ofhere."
Indtans staner Enc King (4-6),
who returned from a rehabilitation
assignment ear her in the day,
allowed three runs, two earned on
s1x h1ts. He struck out four and
d1dn 't walk a batter in his first
complete game of the season.
"Down on rehabilitation I threw
three stans and got better every
time," King said. "Tonight it just
carried on. I had good command
and no pain. I'm really loolcing forward to my next start"
Joe Carter's run-scoring groundout and Greg Myers' sacrifice fly
put the Blue Jays up 2- I in the
fourth . Roberto Alomar staned the
inning w1th a triple, the first hit
given up by King. Alomar held at
third on Carter's grounder, and
when Jeff Manto threw to first, he
broke for home and slid around the
tag.

'
"The mfield
was playing back
everywhere except first," Blue
Jays manager Cito Gaston sa1d. "If
Robbie had h1s cho1ce, I thmk he
would have gone when Joe made
contact I don't like to see htm
make the head-first slide, but tt
worked th1 s time."
Mark Whiten robbed Myers of
extra bases when he jumped at the
wall for the out, then threw to secand to double up Kelly Gruber 10
end the mnm g.
However, home plate ump1r e
Chuck Meflw cth er ruled John
Olerud crossed the plate before the
ou t at second .
''Our con tentiOn was that the
runner d1d not cro ss the plat e
before the runner was out,'' Ind1an s
manager M1ke Hargrove smd. " I
was watchmg the play and saw the
guy at leas t three feet away from
the plate.
'Tm not quesuonm? anybody 's
mtegnty. I mean, they re all good
umplfes. It 's JUSt th at we 've been
gettmg the short end of the st" ~ for
the la st thr ee weeks on ' I use
calls "
Ran ce Mulhfllks doubled m the
seventh , went to thlfd on Myers'
ground-ou t and scored when King
threw wildly to fmt on Manuel
Lee's comebacker as the Blue Jays
scored an unearned run for a 3-1
lead.
"I JUSt d1dn't have a good gnp
on the ball ," King sa id. "I had
plenty of time but d1dn't usc it."
Carlos Bacrga led off the fourth
with a smgle, went to third on a
double by Carlos Martinez and
scored on Albert Belle's sacrifice
ny as the lndtans took a 1-0 lead.
In other games, Boston edged
Oakland 11 - 10 in 14 innmgs,
Chicago rallied past Texas 10-8,
Minnesota mauled New York 12-3,
Detrott downed Cahforn1a 3-1.
Kansas City defeated Milwaukee 54 and Baltimore beat Seattle 4-2 in
II innings.
Red Sox 11, A's 10
Fredd1c Patek h1t three home
runs in a game. So d1d Jeff Treadway, Juan Beniquez and Lee Lacy.
Even Pete Rose d1d 11.
But for all the big home runs
Jack Clark ·had hit, he'd never done
it. Until Wednesday night.
Clark, who already had connected for a grand slam and a solo shot,
homered with two outs in the 14th
inning, lifting the Boston Red Sox
over Oakland I I- 10.
Wade Boggs went 5-for-7 w1th
three doubles for Boston, but the

N L games ... __&lt;C_o_n_un_u_ed_f_ro_m_P_a~ge_5_l
tO figure -out what is.causing his
sluggishness and mabtlity to sleep
soundly. A medical computer scan
turned up nothing suspicious.
Manager Lou Piniella srud the
Reds hoped to learn more about
Dav1s' ailment today when results
of the blood tests were expected.
Piniella was delighted with the
performance ofRijo~ whogave
way to reliever Gmo Minutelh after
having thrown about 100 pitches: a
limit Piniella said he had set RIJO
struck out two and walked one.
"He threw the ball very well. I
was well pleased with the way he
threw," Piniella said. "He had
good command of his pitches.''
R1jo said the ankle in which he
:chipped a bone June 20- which
·kept him on the disabled list until
:last week - was a bit sore
"Wednesday.
"I was pretty lucky tomght,"
Rijo said. "I had good stuff and a
good slider ... I concentrated on
making the nght pitches at the right
:time.' '
Cubs manager Jim Ess1an
·watched Rijo induce the Cubs to hit
into three double plays.
"He always gives you seven or
eigllt innings, it seems. He's just a
real good pitcher, a premier pitcher," Essian srud. "You can rally
around him, and rest your bullpen
when he pitches."
Ted Power got five outs for h1s
second save, p1tchmg out of a Jam
in the eighth when Chicago had
runners on second and third w1th
one out but failed to score.
Frank Casllllo (3-2) gave up
four runs and seven hits m four
:innings.
: Ryne Sandberg's RBI single
-gave Chicago the lead in the first,
:but Cincinnati went ahead for good
in the second. Bill Doran and
:Oienn Braggs singled and Je ff
:Reed walked, loading the bases.
·Rijo singled for a 2-1 lead and
"Bany Larkin followed with an RBI
:single.
· Cincinnati added a run m the
third when Chris Saba doubled,
·took third on center fielder Dwight
:smith's throwing error and scored
·:on Doran's single.
Smith took away a potenual
~two-run homer from Saba in the
:fifth when he leaped above the center field fence to catch Saba' s

mg. ''

He batted .158 last season w1th
three home runs and increase d
slightly to . 19 3 this seaso n.
Wednesday's home run was h1s
fourth.
" My pllch didn't do what I
wanted 1t to do. It d1d what M1ster
Sanders wanted 11 ID do," said R1ck
Reed, who gave up the home run.
" It was a smkcr that slipped up."
After Sanders' homer, Jeff
Treadway's single chased Reed and

Vincente Palacios (6-3) walked
Lonnie Smith. Jeff Blauser then h1t
his e1ghth homer of the seasop.
Mike Stanton got h1s second
save with two and two-th~rd
innings of scoreless relief.
Dodgers 6, Mets 3
Darryl Strawberry homered and
drove in the go-ahead run with his
third hit of the game.
Brett Butler singled off Ttm
Burke (4-5) in the fifth and stole
second. Juan Samuel walked, Eddie
Murray hit into a fielder's choice
and Strawberry singled off reliever
Doug Simons for a 4-3 lead. Earlier, he hit his fourth home run of the
season against his former teammates.
Kevin Gross (6-6) struck out
nme and pitched five shutout
innings in relief of Ore! Hershiser,
who gave up three runs and six hits
m four innings. Mets starter Sid
Fernandez left in the fourth w1th an
inflammed left shoulder.
PhiUies 9, Padres 3
Wes Chamberlain drove m a
career-high SIX runs wJth a pair of
three-run homers. Chamberlain singled in the second, homered in the
fourth and sixth off Greg Hams (23) and singled in the seventh.
Bruce Ruffin (2-J) allowed two
runs and six hits m seven innings.
Roger McDowell , traded to Los
Angeles after the game, combined
w1th Joe Boever on three-hit relief.
Astros 9, Cardinals 5
Ken Caminiti hit a two-run double in a four-run first and Jeff Bag.
well homered.
Darryl Kile (4-6) gave up one
run and five hits in SIX mnings and
struck out four. Dean Wilkins
pitched two and two-third mnings
for his first save.
Bob Tewksbury (7-7) allowed
f1ve runs and four hits in four
innmgs.

NOW ENROLLING
GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOLS
Title XX Funded -

Garden club members take tour

Pre-School
Only
446-2483

Call

For Ages 3 to 12

Mrs,. Shirin Nuggud - M. Ed.
Administrator

1111 N. Soc. Au.

S41 Stcond Ave.
Gallipolis

lower show wtll be held and judged
and discussed by Janet Bolin. This
will be the program.
Pauline Atkins, Stella Atkins
and Eva Robson had furntshed
flowers for the churches.
For the program Dorothy
Woodard had an article on "Friendly Critters." She stated lady bugs
devour millions of Insects and
some caterpillars. Spiders are
feared and hated but should be welcomed in the garden. Their webs
attract and trap thousands of
insects. Lizards are another creature not popular but that consume
thousands of insects. A salamander,
Guest Day to be held by the Cliff. often mistaken for a hzard. also
side Golf Course in Gallipolis on cosumes insects.
Aug. 14 and also the mixed scramThree arrangements were made
ble to be held at the Meigs Club on and discussed that are to be used at
Aug. I I with a potluck dinner. the Meigs County Fair Flower
Meat will be furnished.
Show.
Winners after 18 holes were
The first was made by Binda
Norma Custer, low gross; Julia Diehl and featured greenery, Queen
Hysell, low net; Ada Nease, low Anne's Lace and ''Tiesel."
putts; and Debb1e Sayre, chlp-mEva Robson's arrangement,
hole.
"My Heart With Rapture Thrills,"
featured red glads and sprayed
dried material in a red container.
She also had an arrangement
The Southern Boosters will "Amber Waves of Grain" using
meet Monday at 7:30p.m. to work
on the football programs. Those dried dill, goldenrod, wheat, oats,
sorghum cane. dried arttchoke pods
having any advertisements should
and
fern fronds.
bring them to the meeting. Anyone
Each
arrangement was d1scussed
wanting to work on this project IS
and
the
meeung
ad)omed.
invited to attend.

M~i;;T:~~en ~~~if:~"'~;"
.t. ' .v' ' •

~~

l

BACK TO FIRST- Toronto's Roberto Alomar dives back to forst base on a pickoff attempt
in the eigbth inninl( of Wednesday nil(bt's game
with 29.
Rob Deer h1t his 2 I st home run
for the Tigers as they prevented
Mark Langston (14-5) from becoming the first I 5-game wmner m
baseball. Fonner Tiger Lance Parrish homered for the only run off
Walt Terrell (7-9).
Orioles 4, Mariners 2
Chris Hailes hit a two-run single
in the lith inning.
The· Orioles loaded the bases
against Bill Swift (I -2) on two
walks and an infield single by
Dwight Evans before Hailes, who
entered the game in the ninth
inning at catcher, singled to right
field.
M1ke Flanagan (2-3) pitched
three and two-third scoreless
innmgs.
Royals S, Brewers 4
Bnan McRae hit four singles.
George Brett, Jim Eisenreich
and.Brent Mayne hit RBI singles

Fourteen ladies were m attendance at the Tuesday Morning
League at tl!,e Meigs County Golf
Cowse.
The group was reminded of

·.:..r

_,

and one-third innings. Chris Bosio
(7-8) lasted only two and two-tlurd
innings.

Sports briefs

There Will Be A Concert
Featuring
THE GOSPEL JOURNEYMEN
at the
REEDSVILLE FELLOWSHIP
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
SATURDAY, AUG. 3
7:00 P.M.
The church is located on
S.R. 12 4 across from
Forked Run State Park.

Baseball
BOSTON (AP) - The Oakland
Athletics acquired right-hander
Ron Darling from the Montreal
Expos for minor league pitchers.
Matt Grott and Russell Cannier.
The Expos had aquired Darling
from the New York Mets on July
I 5. Darling was 5-6 for the Mets
and 0-2 for Montreal.
Base baD
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Los Angeles Dodgers acquired
right-handed reliever Roger
McDowell from the Philadelphia
Phillies for right-hander Mike Hartley and minor league outfielder
Braulio Castillo. McDowell was 36 with three saves for the Phillies.

THE PUI.IC IS INVITED

GORBY FARM HYMN SING- Among tbe
featured singers at the Sixth Annual Hymn Sing
to be held Saturday beginning at 7:30 p.m. on
the Carl Gorby Farm wiD be The True Gospel
Sounds. Other special singers will include tbe
Gabriel Quartet and the Corintbain Cboir. Tbe

Gorby farm is located two miles west of
Langsville at tbe intersection of Route 124 and
325. Tbose attending are encouraged to take
their own lawn cbairs. Tbe public is invited to
attend .

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received well In advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
THURSDAY
CHESTER - Vacauon Btble
School will be held at the New Life
Covenant Chester Church of God
on Riebel Road through Friday
from 7-9 p.m. mghtly for ages 318.
RACINE - The Racine American Legton Post 602 wJII meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. for installation of officers . Guests will be
Mick Williams, representing the
Veterans Semce Office, and Jason
Arnott, Buckeye Boys State Representative. Refreshments will be
served after the meeting.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AI-Anon w1ll
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
992-5763 for infonnation.

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•

'lle news

oam.SGllVl

against tbe visiting Cleveland IndianS, wbo fell
5-1. (AP)

during a four-run th1rd inmng , and
McRae's singled home another run
m the fourth for a 5-1 lead.
Luis Aquino (5-2) pitched SIX

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter No. 172 Order of the Eastem Star, Middleport, will have its
regular meeting Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Members are to bring a sack
lunch for refreshments. Officers
wear street dresses.
RACINE - Southern Local
Schools (\indergarten will hold a
meeting on Aug. I for the parents
of students entering the kmder garten program this fall. The meetmg w1ll be held m Southern High
School cafeteria at 7 p m. If any
student has not been registered for
kindergarten this fall, parents must
bring a birth certificate, unmunization record and soc1al security
number.

Bashan Road on Saturday at 7:30
p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. The public is invited to auend.

Saturday beginning at 8 p.m. All
Beegle family members and fnends
are welcome.

TUPPERS PLAINS . Car wash
at the Tuppers Plains Gulf Station
on Saturday from 9 a.m. ID 5 p.m.
Cost 1s free. Proceeds to benefit the
Eastern Vamty Basketball Program.

POMEROY - Vacauon B1ble
School fair will be held at the First
Southern Baptist Church on Saturday from 1-3 p.m. There will be
games and activiues for all ages.
The public is invlled.

HARRISONVILLE - There will
be a ch1cken barbecue at the Sc1p10
Volunteer Fire Department on Saturday from II a.m. to 5 p.m. Cost
is $4 for adults and $2 for children
and includes chicken, cole slaw ,
roll, baked beans. There will also
be homemade ice cream. Tractor
pull at 6 p m. w1th weigh-m at 5
p.m.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange will meet Saturday at 8
p.m. at the grange hall on County
Road I ncar Salem Center. Election
of officers will be held and all
members are urged to attend. A
potluck supper will follow the
meeting.

RUTLAND - There will be a
men's softball tournament at the
Rutland· Ballfield on Saturday and
Sunday sponsored by the Locomotion Teen Center. Cost is $60 plus
two balls. Slow pitch . Call John
Harrison, 992-7546, Bob Johnson,
992-6890 or Bob Sisson, 742-2187
for infonnation.
REEDSVILLE - The second
annual Cundiff family reunion will
be held Saturday at Forked Run
State Park. All relauves and
descendants of the late John R.
Cundiff arc welcome. Bring a piCnic lunch. Call 742-2573 for information.
DORCAS - There will be a
square dance at the home of Ronnie
and Leanna Beegle in Dorcas on

LANGSVILLE - The S1xth
Annual Hymn Smg w1ll be held at
the Carl Gorby Farm, located two
m1les west of Langsville at the
mtersectlon of Route 124 and 325,
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Singers will
mclude the True Gospel Sounds,
Gabnel Quartet, and the Corinthian
ChoU". Those attending should take
lawn chairs. The public is mvited.
REEDSVILLE - The Gospel
Journeymen will perform at the
Reedsville Fellowship Church of
the Nazarene, across from Forked
Run State Park, on Saturday at 7
p.m. The public tS invJtcd
SUNDAY
CHESTER - The descendants of
the late E.R. Hollon will hold thell"
annual reumon on Sunday at the
Chester firehouse. Potluck dinner
at 12:30 p.m. All friends and relatives arc welcome.

Nellie Lowe and grimdson, Jeremy, spent a week in Aleron w1th her
son, Pat
Kenneth and June Newhou se
and Darold Graham, who live m
South Carolina, recently VISited
their mother, Bessie Graham and
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
visited her sister, Lorene, and her
husband, Bill Scott, in Nelsonville.
A few days later they visited Bill,
who entered Doctor's Hospital as
an emergency patient.

Boosters to meet

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LOTTRIDGE - The Lottridge
Community Center will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. Public is invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Auxiliary will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. Evelyn Holter will meet
with the group preceding the meeting at 7 p.m.
MARIETTA -The Post Poho
Support Group of the Easter Seal
Society of the River Cities will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the fire house in
Rutland instead of Thursday at regularly scheduled.

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LONG BOITOM - There wtll
be a hymn sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom on
Friday at 7:30 p.m. featuring local
talent. Pastor Steve Reed inv1tes
tlie public. Refreshments will be
served.
RACINE - There will be a meetat Southern High School on
Fnday at 10:30 am. for all girls in
grades 7-12 in the disuict who will
be trying out for volleyball this fall.
m~

PRE-SCHOOLS and DAY CARE
Pre-School &amp;
Day Cere

An update from Ruth Waller on
Ameriffora was read. She asked
that each garden club member give
50 cents over and above their
pledge.
Pearl Canaday and Margaret
Belle Weber reported on the
planters in the memorial park.
Eva Robson had visited the
Gautz Garden and Blennerhassett
The open meeting to be held
Aug. 26 was discussed and plans

A tour of Janet Bolin's garden
was enjoyed before the Rutland
Garden Club met recently at the
home of Pauline Atkins for its
annual picnic. Members also toured
Mrs. Atkins' garden.
Pauline Atkins presided at the
meeting and had devotions reading
"Psalm for Today" and a poem,
"Summer." The creed and collect
were given in unison and rQil call
was answered with "My Favorite

Open Year Round

limited
Enrollment

Page-7

•

TWO LOCATIONS
State Licensed -

Thursday, August 1, 1991

-~

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Braves 8, Pirates 6
Deion Sanders is beginning to
make a hab1t of hitting home runs
on his getaway day of the baseball
season.
Last year, he did it for the New
York Yankees against Cleveland.
On Wednesday night, he did tt
again as the Atlanta Braves beat the
Pittsburgh Pirates 8-6.
"It was a great feehng to end up
on a good note,'· Sanders said.
"It's been a long time since I felt
like I contributed to a win."
Sanders is re-Joining the Atlanta
Falcons, the team he plays comerback for during the football season.
He'll take a few days off and report
Monday.
Th1s time, h1s departure was
scheduled. Last year, the Yankces
released h1m a day after he homered agamst the Cleveland Ind1an s
and headed back ID football camp.
He said his goodbye to baseball
for th1s year wllh a flair. After his
406-foot drive pulled the Braves to
6-5. he was asked to make a curtain
call by the 23,955 fans at Fulton
County Stadium. Sanders came out
of the Braves' dugout and pumped
his fists in the rur.
"Otis Nixon got a standmg ovation the other night and I said at the
time that I would love to get one,"
Sanders srud. "That was my flfst m
baseball and it was a good feel-

drive.

· Cincinnati got a run in the sixth
·when Braggs singled, stole second,
·Uiok third on a throwing error and
scored on Reed's sacrifice fly.
In other games, Atlanta beat
' Pittsburgh 8-6, Los Angeles beat
New York 6-3. Philadelphia beat
San Diego 9-3 and Houston beat
StLouis 9-5.

game would have lasted even
longer than the five hours it took at
Fenway Park without Clark's winner off Steve Chitren (1-3).
Clark's 17th home tun of the
season also was his 18th career
homer in extra innings, second in
major league history to Willie
Mays' 22.
"My job always has been to hit
home run s, espec1ally late in a
game," he said. "You fall more
often than not, so I! ' s mce ID come
through."
Clark hit h1s ninth career slam in
the third innmg off Dave Stewart.
He homered agam in the eighth,
and Jody Reed's two-shot pulled
Boston to withm 10-9. In the ninth,
Ell1s Burks tnpled and Boggs sm·
gled off R1ck Honeycutt to tie 11.
The Red Sox f1n1shed w1th 11
ex tra-ba se h1ts, h1gh in the maJors
th• s seaso n. Greg Harn s (7·11 )
p1tchcd four hitless mnmgs for the
VICtOry.
R1ckcy Henderson led off th e
game w1 th a home run for the 47th
um e, cxtendmg h1 s own record.
Jose Canseco drove m three runs
for the Athletics.
Wh en the game went extra
mning s and as the mtdmght tradmg
deadline approached, the Athleucs
announced they had acquired pitcher Ron Darling from Montreal for
two minor leaguers.
White Sox 10, Rangers 8
Robtn Ventura hit a two-out
grand slam in the bottom of the
ninth inning.
Ventura, who hit a solo home
run m third inning, won it w1th h1s
fourth hit of the game.
Pmch-htner Cra1g Grebeck drew
a leadoff walk from Kenny Rogers
m the mnth and Ron Kark6vice smgled. J ocy Cora bunted into a
forceout, R1ch Gossage reheved
and retired Carlton Fisk on a
popup, but Tim Raines walked to
load the bases. Ventura connected
off Gossage (4-2).
Donn Pall (4- I) was the wmner. •
Twins 12, Yankees 3
Kent Hrbek's grand slam highlighted an eight-run second mnmg.
Shane Mack, who hit two home
runs, and Ch1li Dav1s also connected in the big inning. The Twins got
a season-high 20 hits , includm g
four by Mike Pagbarulo and three
each by Hrbck and Mack.
Hrbck hJt his seventh career
slam off Scott Sanderson (10-7).
Tigers 3, Angels I
Cecil Fielder hit two home runs
and took over the maJor league lead

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

MARIE'ITA - Camp Challenge
will be conducted at Hervida Friday through Sunday by the Easter
Seal Society of the"Rlver Cities.

992-7328

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ALL OUTDOOR FURNITURE FROM LLOYD/FLANDERS

50o/o OFF LIST PRICE
KELVINATOR 16.0 CU. FT. FROST FREE REFRIGERATOR........S499 .00

SATURDAY
BASHAN -Denver Hill, Foster,
W.Va., wiU be the guest speaker at
the Red Brush Church of Christ on

Middloport

•

"\

�Birthday observed
Daniel' Buckley, son of Bryce
and Pam Buckley, recently celebrated his first birthday with a
pany at his home.
A teddy bear "My First Birthday" !heme was carried out wilh
balloons, banners and streamers.
An afternoon cookout was held
wilh the foUowinf. attending: John
and Glenna Riebe , maternal grandparents; Roger and Darlene Buckley, paternal grandparents; John
and Henrietta Bailey, great paternal
grandparents; Dorotha Riebel ,
great maternal. grandmolher; John
Riebel · and Renee , Jimmy and
Carissa Banon.
Cake and ice cream were later
served to those mentioned and
Ruby Watson, great maternal
grandmother; Kevin, Dia na,
Michelle, Miranda and Benjamin
Buckley; Jean Thomas, Charles,
Betty, Eve and Veronica Watson;
Greg, Jocelyn, Kelli and Juli Bailey; Larry, Janet and Ashley Life;
and Roger and Betty Toney.

HYMN SING - The Hillside Baptist Cburcll will be having a
bymn sing Saturday, Aug. 10, at 8 p.m. at the stage area on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot. Singers will include God's Little Lambs,
The Joyful Hearts, Ms. Linda Jones, The Redeemed Quartet, and
The Children of God, under the direction or Dan Hood. Tbe public
is invited to attend and bring a lawn chair. Pictured are the
Redeemed Quartet.

Birth is announced

CIDLDREN OF GOD

Laurel Cliff community news
Kristi Jacobs and Healher Varney, Clearwater, Fla, are spending
the summer with Mr. and Mrs .
Clifford Jacobs.
Darbi Dorst. Marysville. is visiting her grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Jas Gilmore.
Mrs . Miele Ash and sons,
Michael and Mathew , and Mrs.
. Rich Ash and daughters, Carissa
and Caron, and Healher Varney
and Kristi Jacobs spent Wednesday
in Hurricane, W.Va. at !he Waves
of Fun Park.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore are
spending a few days in Amlin wilh
their daughter, Mrs. Sandy
Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Van lnwagen spent !he evening wilh Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nelson, Findley, spent the weekend wilh Mr.

and Mrs. Denver Nelson.
Rev. and Mrs. Willam WiUiams
are attending camp at Mansfield
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Nelson and
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest VanJnwagen
attended a reunion Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Beach.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs will celebrate
her 96lh birthday at the extended
care unit at Veterans Memorial
Hospital on Aug. 5. Mrs. Jacobs is
a member of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church.

Doctors urged to
inform patients of
possible risks of
breast implants
GAITHERSBURG . Md. (AP)
- The Food and Drug Administration today urged doctors to take
extta care to infonn patients of the
possible risks of breast implants.
He said many women feel they
· have been lulled into believ ing
such surgery is risk-free.
David Kessler, FDA administtator, spoke at a meeting of an agency advisory panel considering the
possible heallh risks of one commooly used type of breast implant.
coated wilh polyurelhane foam to
prevent painful and unsightly

lumps.

I

1

I

CHRISfOPHER KIMES

New arrival
Kennell! and Julie Kimes, Middleport. are announcing the birth of
a son, Christopher Richard Thomas
-Kimes, on March 13 at Holzer
Medical Center.
The infant weighed seven
'pounds and was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are Thomas and
Louise Kimes, Racine; and !he late
Jules and Ann Biron, Middlepon.
Great grandparents are Mrs .
Helen Kimes, Mason, W.Va.; and
Mrs. Rulh Neuberg Biron, Chicago, Ill.

Birthday celebration

But his remarks went beyond
!hat issue to !he broader question of
whether silicon breast implants
should be banned from the marketplace altogether. The FDA is considering such action while studying
data submitted by manufacturers at
its request
"I will not prejudge the
results," Kessler said.
"But, as we analyze the data we
have required manufacturers to
submit, American women must be
aware !hat !here are risks -as well
as benefits - associated with lhese
breast implants."
He said !he risks include hardening and pain, rupture of the implant
with release of !he silicon gel, and
infection. He said there are also
unanswered questions, including
the possibility that the implants
could increase the risk of cancer.
While there is no evidence now
that !hey increase cancer risk, he
said, " we must investigate the possibility."

Sylvia Blake recently celebrated
her birlhday with a potluck dinner
and cake at the home of Ferndora
Story on Sunday.
Attending were Landau and
Sarah Hope, Joshua and Amhony
Emore, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor
Bud and Kalherine Thomas, Linda Charlie Sheen. known for his draMayes, Glenwood, W.Va.; Randy matic roles in such box-office hits
and Diane Hayes, Paden City , as " Platoon " and "Wall Street,"
W.Va.; Jeffre y and Jackie Bay, takes a shot at comedy in " Hot
Dayton; Larry and Beneua Rae Shots!" and hopes it will end his
Dickerson, Proctorville; Laura six film flops.
Krebs, Albany; Van , Diana, Jen''I'm not blind . I know what
nifer and Jonathan Hinds, Gallipo- peopl e are say in g abou t me,"
lis; Edna Clark, Retha Day, Jan and Sheen said in a recent interview
Darla Pickett, John and Sylvia promoting the film. which opened
Blake, Randy, Cheryl, Mallory, Wednesday. Sheen plays a hotshot
Madison and Belhany King, Mrs. Navy pilot in the spoof of ''Top
Gun ."
Pearl Williams and John Story.
Blessing prayer was given by
" One of lhc reasons I did this
Randy Hayes and fo~owing dinner film was that everylhing I've tried
the group enjoyed singing and vis- for the last couple of years hasn ' t
worked, and I figured I had nothing
iting.
Recent overnight guests of Fern- ·to lose by going in a completely
dora Story were D~. and Mrs. opposite direction," he said. .
William J. Rueger, Plain.City: Mrs.
Sheen blames his string of bad
Story was employed wilh Riepen- movies on bad scripts and bad timhoff, Coopez and Rueger Pediaui- ing, but he also S31d bad judgment
played a role. He said it coincided
cians for 23 years.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller, with his alcohol and drug years
Florida, will spend IWO days wi lh which he says he has now over~
Ferndora Story. Mrs. Miller is !he come.
"OccasionaUy durin$ !hose six
fonner Mary Jo Stanley and she
years,
I was straight, like during
graduated from St. Joseph's School
of Nursing with Mrs. Story 4 7 ' Eight Men Out' and ' Major
years ago. Mrs. Miller has returned Lea~ue,' when I knew I'd have to
for her 50th high school class get m shape and play some ball,' '
he said.
reunion at Elizabeth, W.Va.

Shooting at comedy

.•.

\

Marlin and Debbie Davis Evans,
Racine, are announcing !he birth of
their son, Samuel Ray, on July 14
at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
The infant weighed seven
pounds and nine ounces and was 20
inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Raymond and Ada Evans, Racine.
Maternal grandparents are
Everett and Charlotte Grant,
Racine. Maternal great grandparents are Merle and Freda Davis,
Rutland.

BACK TO SCHOOL

Classified

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Elizabeth Taylor put off her eighth wedding by one day, moving it from a
Saturday to a Sunday.
The Oscar-winnmg actress and
marrying kind of woman said
Wednesday the nuptials will take
place Oct. 6. She gave no reason.
Taylor. 59, and fiance Larry
Fortensky, 39 . met during drug
abuse treatment at the Beuy Ford
Clinic. Fonensky works in con struction.

SALE

1-Ctrd of Thtnkt

MONDAY PAPER

~UEFJ~EASYD~~·~:PER
TMURSOAV PAPER
FRIDA~ PAPER

-

4 - Gi~ttiWIV

20% OFF *A~~..!!'!..f!!AR

992 - Micldl.,ort

11 - Melp Wanltd
12- Situetion Wat:tted

13-lnt,,ance
14- eu•tn•• Training

16 - JIIIecUo. TV. CB Repair

17- Misc:ellen.ous

NIKE - REEBOK - CONVERSE - KEDS - LA GEAR - DEXTER - CONNIE &amp; MORE

246 - Rio Grande
266.-Guyln Oist
64 :1 - Arabia Ois t

PLUS, There will be other SPECIAL PRICES on select styles of shoes
not listed. Come in and see what bargains we have, an at
SPECIAL PRICES!

379 - Walnbt

843 247 949 742 -

675 - Pt. Pleasant

458- Loon

985 - Chnter

Portland
Letan Fall &amp;
Raein e
Autltnd

676 - Apple Grove
773 - Mason

882-Ntw Haven
937 - Bufhlo

Salute Our Veterans on
SuperAmerica Day.
On Sunday. August 4 Naval AuTrammg
Comma nd Cho1r All -Ohi o Sta te Fair Band .
All -Oh1o Youth Chou and Bob Hope all
come toge ther for a day -long sal ute to all
Ame n can Veterans and to welcome home
the troo ps fro m Desert Storm
All US. ve terans and acuve US. military
personnel wiHbe ad mitted free August 4.

View the World's Largest
Television Screen.
Making its debut appearance. the
world ·s largest video screen will broadcast
The Fair's big· name entertainment live
each evening

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

76 - Boatl &amp; Motors tor Sl it

76 - Auto Peru 6 Acc•sor i•
77-- Auto Repair
78 - Ca mp ing Eq u•pment
79 -Campets &amp; Mot or Homes

DliWJH, OHIO
7/141'fo

992-5335 or 985-3561

Acrou From Poor OHko
POMEROY OHO
lfn

•Quality Work
•Free Estima'lea
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Time ·
•High Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish
MilE IIWIS, Ownor
Rt. 1, Rutland, OH.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Complete Grooming
For All Brnds

8 7 - Uphol1tery

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator
Po1111roy,

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Big-Name Entertainment at the
New In-door Celeste Center
Augus1

8 00 p m WNCI N1ght
and Tnpletc
Augus1 2 8.00 p.m Donny Osmond
Augus1 3 Rax Rtstaurant Day
800 p.m Sh1rley Mu rdock, Surface
Augus1 4 Su~rAmtrica Day
800 pm Bob Hope
AuguSI 5 8·00 p m Nashv11le Now Fea1unng
Loretla Lynn. Grandpa
jones Ralph Emory
and Kcvm Mabl)·
Augus1 6 Bonltn Itt CIUIII &amp;: Dairy Day
8.00 p.m Merle Haggard
Augus1 7 Taco Bdl Day
8:00p.m Damn Yankees
Augus1 8 8:00p.m Sandi Patt1
Augus1 9 Wtndy's Day
8:00p.m. Roben Palmer
Augus1 I0 Campbdl's Soup Day
8 00 pm The Boys
AuguSI 11 Ronald McDonald
Childr-.n"• Charitirs Day
12 30&amp;
6 30 p m Ronald McDonald Show
2 00&amp;
8 00 p m Blackswnc 1hc Mag1nan
Augus1 12 KroguDay
8 00 p m Ganh Brooks
Augus1 13 8 00 p.m Pam La Belle
Augus1 14 Soft &amp;: Dri Day
8 00 p m Wmf!f. r/
Augus1 15 8 00 p m 38 Sp/ ml
Augus1 16 8·00 p m Wmins
Augus1 17 Ohio Lonery Day
8 00 p.m Anne Murray
Augusl 18 Fuji Film Day
2.00&amp;
8. 00 p m Oak R1dgc Boys
Cclcs1c Ccmn rmr ruunmcm uck('[S arr SJOO av:11 lablc
through Ttckrlmaslcr(S J 7'5 surc ha~ l m select
Vtdrmownc locauons ll l 15 surchaT»: ) and arc also
avat lablr m advance at the fatrgrounds (no su rchafJ.J)
and on 1hc day of the show fQr more mformauon phone.

PRICE RWUCEO!

Partial owne~ firlandnMv~ble. The pnce
has been ""'"ced to , $77.900 and
owner f~ancmg of up to 110'11 d purchase
amount may _be DOSSible for QU!Iifyilig person
to buy ro "'"' far&amp;~&gt; home on 31! acres in Ra·
Cine. 4BR, 3bath$, 2 gan~&amp;es, renred I BR apt
Property ildudes 4~00 sq. It farm bid'
Call 614-991·7104 for Appt.

·Fall'\•tsJOn:· brought to yo u by
Dona to's Pizza. Kroger and WCM H-TV 4.
is a 30-foot wide by 20-foot htgh scree n
that wlil towe r 40 feet.

Enjoy the Thrills.and Spills at

the Ford Truck' Stadium.

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT 55.00 PER DAY

Motocross Champwnsh1 p Ractng
August 2-4
Bob Barnes ProfessiOnal Rodeo
Augus t 9- 10
Oh10 State Truck and Tractor Pull
August 12- 15

Make New Friends With the
Exotic llamas and Pot Belly Pigs.
Public Notice
PUBLIC N.OTICE
. The Meigs County Boord
. of Commleoloneralo occopt. lng writtan Holed bids for
· the purcheae of cenein reel
· property es described be, low.
. Written Holed bldl must
be received In the Meigs

It's All Music to Your Ears.
Soun ds of country western . gospel and
roc k 'n' roll mus1c will fill the a1r at free
musiC pa v1hons

: County Commislioner• Of-

, flee. Maigo County Courthouse,

New Celeste Centa
Enjoy The Fair's b1g-name entertain ment in the new a1r co nditioned 11.000
reserved-seat Celeste Center. Tickets are
sold statewide through Ticketmaster and
are also ava1lable at the fairgrounds .

March to the Best of Wendy's
Daily Parade.
Each day at4:30 pm the Wendy's
parade will travel th e length of th e
. fairgrounds.

D1sco un1 Fatr ucktLS art available at partiCipating
Krowr stores
T . H . E

MIChael A Froehlich

Ohio,

· 46789. no toter than Wednesday. Augutt21, 1991 . ot
, 4 :30P.M . No bidsyvill beoc, cepted poatdoted later than
· Augull 21. 1991 . The writ:ten Haled bide should In·
•elude the bidder' I name. ad·
· dreu. telephone number, a
:dncription of the property
.the par10n wllhee to bid on,
•the price the Individual Ia
:bidding on the deecribed
:property. end the dele the
. bid is being mailed. The ..at
:pro party win ba eotd to the
;highest -ponalblo bidder.
: The property to be oold to:
: Parcel No. 1 : The follow;; ng described NOI eol8to.
.oituotod In the Townlhip of
;columbia. In the County of
:Meigs and State of Ohio, to

Enjoy Top Pedonners at The

THE OHIO STATE FAIR l99I

Pomeroy.

:wit:
: The eouthwen corner of
,the southwest quarter of
•Section Number Thiny-Two
'(32) In Townlhlp No. Nine
191 of Range No. Fifteen (1111
of the Ohio Companv'l

Holll5: 9 a .m. to II p.m.,

ptrs op&lt;n at 7 a .m .

'
'·3 Announcements
'

.

Georg~: V Vomov1ch

Govtmor

'

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SAlE
AUG. 1-7, 1991

General Manager

Cake, Candy Shap, Sl
143 Htirrilonville
Entire stodr '""" .,..,.,,

wtd.ngsuppliel.
OVIr 400 pons, 600 moW.

taps. Moot
IIIIIs 111 jfricL
ilso, clillt fOIIIIIIIJW, ohow- .
,,.. -"1.dliplay racb
· and woddl,.

1

9

9

1

742-3033

•

(71 18. 211 ; fBI 1.

PubliC Notice

cttAtlll~

IIIRIIOI • DTIItOI
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
• painting.
Let me da it for you.

VERY REASONABLE

- Roollog

Fony (40) roda: thence
north Fony (40) toda to the
by
HIOI"UII
pllco of beginning. containI
ing Ten 110) acre• mo .. or
B~r
leu.
Excepting from tho Fony
UALITY
140) ecN tract above daocrlllad, one 11 1rod. lla.., 1 ~~~!!!!!..:.
· !]l~·:!.~t:•.
11 &amp;I fHI wide on the aiat ' :L
:rv
1ide, IHtfna a rtaht nf ww
now owned by Louis Cottrill and wife. ·
Said Alai Eetate hiVing
parcel number 011-001117 .
Parcel No. 2: Tha followIng ~lbed
li1uatt In tho County of VInton, In the Townohlp of VInton and in the ltata of Ohio.
to-wit:
Gutters
Being the Olllo ComDown1pout1
pany"• PurchaH, and belnt
tho 10uth half of tho
Gutter Cleaning
south- quarter'of Beet len
Painting
No. Two (21 of oald Townlhlp No. Nine (8), Aanga
FREE ESTIMATES
SixtHn (11), excepting
Fony (40) ac~• off the ..."
end of uld prem1H1101d by
·E. P . Davis to &amp;.and., Cat·
trHl.
. ·
Alii&gt; th• nM111 hllf of iaiil
IOuth...t C l -· ef aald
Section No. Two (2). ax~
ceptlng what E. P. DIVlo
ootd and da,cled to &amp;..anda&lt;
COMPLEtE
Cottrill and John Mirk, conl81ntne - t y . 1701 • - ·
more or ft!la. .. .
·
-OIAITO I•lUI
Also Thirty (Jell oft
thi north end of the - t haH
•10111.
of the -"'-t....,.... of
Section Two 121. 'Townohlp
Nlne(8). Rangallx..,(11)
Heedllnera,
In the _Ol)kl Cofnlleny'
a
.

tick

last DJ Celular
P.ous, Car Stereos
or Radlos, CB's

by

2

!

On SHtlnstaiGtlon

Fnt Estlmatn
742·2656

real-.

BOB JONES
EXC.AVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

•BUY •SELL •TRADE
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00 am- 6 :00pm

742·2421

21ft Mi. outside
"'-

ut an on ....w
Lima Rd.

$u111111tt Spulelt

ROOFING

949·21

Auto uPIMJUlliiY

WATER
HAULING
POOU,
CISTEINS,ITC,
1,625 GAL- UJ.$45
lt. I, lox 71•A

IUILAIID,
OHIO 45775-9626
614-742·2904

7-24 lmo

•Replacement
Window•

•Rooting
•Iniulatlon

JAMES KEESEE

Con~trtible Top1,

992-2772 or
742-2251

Cuttom Carpeta.
Cultom 'S .et

53t Bryan Pleile
Middleport. OhiO
11·14-lfn

Cover•

7/ 31/1 mo.

--,-·- -· .......

·- -~· ----

·- -

BENNETT'S

·-

3 famllloo: Aug. 1,21i3. Clothoo,
Avon, cnfta, 10.? lo Or~nd•
Eatalls, Apt. 2.
FumH1n Pilnta, Dlo
Toole.
" Olivo·-· lot, 211&lt;1, rd. N .
3
11111111 eaie: am Barn•, COx"lllrcervllll Rd., lleroervlle. Aug. 1,2,3. H.

"'"' 'Y

3 Family Yord Sole' AIJ9uot 111,
2nd, 3nl. a:oo-a:oo, Dri 110 In
VInton, Ptom o.-.
ALL Yard Sallt Mutt Be Paid In
Advo-. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dey blforw tho od lo to Nn.
Sunday ldftlon • 2:00 p.m.
Ftldoy. Mondly ldltlon • 2:00
p.m. Sotutdly.
Augull 2nd I 3nl. W . Clothes,
Di-il Toyo, Mloc. 430 Lake
Dofvo, loGrandl.

BIG Yard Solo: Frl, Sat. 11-5. 1141
Fourth
Avo.
Clothing
houooworea, Borblo acCO.:
~..

lnlf'l

HWlng mschlne.

drum•,

tools,

CltpOII Sale: Rain Or Shine.
Augull 2nd And 3rd. 20C Klnoon
Dofvo.

Oarogo hie: Augutl 2, 3nl.
Fumllw1; Leta Crothee From
Ktrr.

Bldwolt

Rodney Pika, Fol·

loW 8igno. Hill/Neat.

l.all Of BHaon: Evarythlng

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEAAING.
WATER end SEWER
LINES

TRUCKING AVAILABLE
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7458

4-28·91 · 1 mo. d .

Got Fumoco, FlropiiCO.
Cheap! 424 Rana Avenue
Kanauga. Thulldly, Friday
llturdiy.
'

Moving llio : FurnMure, Applilncjo,
Kldo
Clothoo
ateyclel, Toyo. Everything 1111
To Gol301 Q,..., Ttrr•c• Court
111-? 114-441-11142.
•
Satu,.y'- Auguot 3, 11111. 411
Jackaon ~lko, t-? All Stzt CiolfiInt. ImaM Applil,_, Mlac.
Yard Soia: At llg Four Church
llonnan Tr- JfQad. T..,lldly
Frldoy,t-1.
'
Auaull 211&lt;1, 3nl. 3 112 Milot 0u1
Buiilvllle Rood. Elocttlc Stove
Ctothoo, Mony llorolllmof
'

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

Pt. Plealant

w uas

&amp;VIcinity

Iring It In Or We
Plclt Up.

3 flmlly )'ll'd acie, T... ro, Frl,

Sa~ Clrnp Conley,~,
Taylor StrMI,

KEN'S lPPUlNCE
SEIYICE
9U-5SJ5 or
915-3561

toto of nlol ototh , Home tntllior, -arcyoto, e, A"'- 4.

Clmp Ground lard Ilia 111.
Auf I. 1:00o4:00, 10 pont'clpol·
lng llmitlol, , _ , ""' Drill

Pest Office
217 I. Secottd St.
POMIIOY, OHIO

Acra11 ,,...

316/90/Hn

drawlnge.
II_IIMy
Wotor
Campground, .Clatllpollo Forry.
10 mllel Iouth of Potnl
Pt-nt. Rt. 2.
Latga lard Sale, Aug 1 thN ?
lldlrl
Oa~
llpoHt Forry, 1\imH~n, clothing,

•-leya.

1~,whatnoto.

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

BISSEll &amp; 1...11
CONSTRUCnON
tllew Homes
tG......s

Locattd 011 Safford School Rd. off Rt. 141

(614) 446·9416 or 1

'

o-:

EXCAVATING

.... ' ........ ' ....... .. ......... .

7

•Complete

ltmttWint

WE DO

Stop &amp; Co111part
froo lstinll!fn

ROOFING

985-4473

667-6179

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

Announcemen ls

FREE ESTIMlTES

•20 YNra Experience
•Quality
end
· Cuatom

742·2328
1/ 22/tfn

~

NltW ~ SJ:MCltlf- POOL
I~ To '1D PU11UC

1-FIH I 1110• .old, ~-::
rtor,_
ml1141 fMift. •

2081.

&amp;Vlcln"y

Mltttntt.~, 111.. Wltlll , _ I
Wllill ...... .

,.471-1171

-0
I
CA8Ilf • CAIII'D trGa IIIIIT

Flftlllt Cit, HouM INUit, 4
Yacra Oltl, Very Gonua; lfiiYell

l1IIAat IIAII ,

Doclawld, Sholl. 1*"'-llltt,
814-441-0121.

AJlc:.u)E

-···

Middleport

4 Tlgtr Kitl.,._ AI lfaore White

Reunlooi - Oct~ - -

--

· PomtrOy,

Giveaway .

t\ CAIII'IIIG • Daouttful 9urrouncflnao
RA11!8 • Day, Week, MoiJth. or Seuon
t\ PICRIC IIIIIIL~ ... l1lUI&amp; hr Rea&lt;

------·-- ---- ~·-·-·

H -'10 lin

--·

,JROMM BUILDERS

J&amp;L
INSULATION
· CUIPiial II Padlr ran
•.I(J,YI Siding

W. Ya.
304-773-9560

• Alae 'II ......... ., lind
lltulted In 1lle allOW IWMCI·

'

Sal

Glrat! Sale: Thunodly, Friday. 3
IINaa Out M1, N .

HOWARD

AIR CONDtnONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBIL( &amp; DOUBLEWID£ HOMlS

12e TNrd Avs., Roar. (Behind
Tabor'o Flo« Coveting), Ftl,

Gorogo Stil: Aug. 3rd, 430
HldgOwood Dr., N .

6/12/'91/1 mo.

Now /n.
Stotkll

..,......_

$30

TlCKEIVIllE RD.
RACINE, OH.

(614)
696-1006
6-6-'91

IIRBIBRf.

I'

APPAUCHIAN

NEW- REPAIR

.........

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Big BIG I Fatoily Sale: A~Uil
2n4l I fn. fOtchin Stove, TOOII,
Ount CoNIIIIa-. Much llonll
112 Mile Froon luilvlllo Road, On
Oaorgaa Crook Rood.

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

Convertible Tops.
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST. MASON, WV.

1-(304)773-9560

112'11•· rL

HowardL

••ll!ed

11·14-'90tfn

949-2826

HAVE REFERENCES
(614 985·4180

1 I d

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

COMPLDE AUTO
UPHOLStERY

Yard Salt

3 Family Ooraaa Silo: X·LG
Mont Clothea, llo~Ciothoa,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

A&amp;l

7

Road. ClothH, Aduno Boyo,
Oltlo, Homo lnttrlor, NIK Nocko,
Ftldoy Auguot 2nd Only!

·

30 SESSIONS

11-1008.

Loti : Bt-n And WhHo Welker
Coon Hound, No Coller. Loti In
Rodney Arot. 814-4411-S408.

3 Fomllln: 1 :1110 Out Bulovlllo

Pointing
!FREE ESTIMATES!

8-4-' 91-1 mo.

Loll: Bilek PH Bull Kompor Hoi·
Coli Rob, I 1

- Interior • bttrkN'

992-7130

. 1'

serVICeS
•

low Ar11. It ~n~one Sill P1e11e

- Electrical and Plumbing

FREE ESTIMATES

It~-~=======::

\WAJI ADS]

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE
alb

SIGNS

~:!vi:8r;od~~=~·=

Townohlp and County. OOil·
talntne • aprtne of atook ...,
tar
as followe. ba-

•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
10"/o DISCOUNT TO
SENIOR ClniENS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

992-6648 or
698-6864

- Concrete won;

~;;:::=======lr.:=======::;1 L:===::::i:~:::!...!.:=======:::;
!-10· ~Hfll.

comer
of Section
No. Thtnyone (311
of Townlhtp
No.
Nine (8), Range No. Afleen
115), oftlle011toeom.-v·•
PurchaH: thanae ..,tl'ony

,_,...

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

HO SUNDAY

PurchoH conl81ntne · Forty L.._ _ _ _ _ _ _....__ _ _ _ _ _ _~
140) acrao more or leu.
r
Also, the foHowlng described ..at •a•••· com·
m1noing at the north-t

8 USIDeSS
•

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks

PH. 949-2101
· or Its. 949·2860

1• TNI

a. 4tc

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Now Hilnloo lullt
" Free Ertlmatas"

/.!!.•!. n~
L.,ALU

of Commissioners

See house-trained pot belly p1gs show
off their exceedingly correct indoor behavior. and make fri ends with Alpacas. a
smaller. longer hair version of a llama.

!bt4 lbH ·lH7
For tickds: Co lumbus (614) 4 31· 3600
Cincinnati (513) 749-4949
Cleveland (216) 141 -5555
Dayton (51 3) 228-2323

CARETAKER SERVICES
The Farmers Home Ad·
minlllratlon, U. S . Oaport·
ment of Agriculture. Athens
County Office. will be con·
trecting for caretaker ser·
vices for their inventory and
cuatodial
properties
in
Athens. Meigs and Vinton
Counties .
Caretaker sar.
vices include but are rrot
limited to. performing initial
Mrvlcaa, such as : c:h1nging
locka; replacing windows
and doora; removing tr11h
and debris from property;
winterizing 1ervices; routine
inspections; interior maintenance; yard mtintentnce.
auch 11 mowing, trimming
ahrube, snow removal, etc.
The caretaker must have
available
the neceuarv
equipment and tools to per·
form these eervices.
If interaated in providing 1
quotation on these aervices.
contact Farmers Home Ad ·
mlnietration at 10233 AI·
benv Rd.. Athens.
OH.
46701 bv Augull 12, 1991
for 1 request for Quotation
Package. Phone: 592·6621 .
t8) 1. 2. 4. 3tc

Found: Forntlle Sa-. Hound,
vtelnHy Of Buck Ridge Road.
Wearing Collat. 8~411'(1773.

- Room Addition•
- Oun•r work

· 4·16-86-lfn

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

lne at tho north end of the
east one-half of
the
10uthHil quorter Df Section
No. Two 121 of Townlhip
Nine (9), of Range Six••n
1161. and In the Ohio
Company'a PurchaH.
Tho above doacribed Nil
eatato being tho aouthaall
quarter of tho aouthout
quarter of Section Two (2);
and the north-t querUit of
the ooutho81t quarter of
Section T'wo (2J .
Sold Real Ettate having
parclf number 18·00394 .
Deed RefeNnco: Volume
113, Pego 1011 end Volume
2114. Page 239. Meiga
County Deed Record·e. Vol·
uma 83. Poge 174 and Volume 138, Pege119, Vinton
County Deed Rocords.
No worrantlae are mode ••
to any li1ns. mortgaaes or
encumbrances on the above
Real Ell8te.
Tht Board of Commissioners may ,.ject ony bldo
and re·edvertiM thi1 prop·
artY untlf all ouch proparty Ia
aold or le..ed.
Terms of p~~yment 1re 11
foflowe: 1 0% of purchal8
price paid lmmedlatlly by
ceeh orbenk check. RemainIng balence due within thirty
(30) dar• of Hit.
Maigo County Board

CEDAR
CONStRUCTION

CARPENTER SERVICE ·

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

614-992-6820

Public Notice

FOUND- llock I wNtt, mole cot
In Dolttr, heafthy IM·lii2-Z754.

YOUNG'S

"4llleasonabla Prices"
PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949-2860

304~711-1018 .

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

7-25 I mopd.

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Lost &amp; Found

CockorSponlol,

667·6681
After 7:00 p.m.

3-14-'91-lfn

Utter

FOUND, F1m11e Collie •nd rn111

Roofia., Yiayl
siding, Paintia.,
and Home repairs

742·2451

kitten,

HappyAds

6

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

•Reasonable Rates

and

l

L_ __;-~8:;_·1:,:4~··.:,&amp;1l,;,·tf~n~

INDEPENDENT •

GROOM
ROOM

81 - · Mome Improvement •
82 - Piumbing &amp; He~~t i n g
83-EJ.c., lting
84- Eiectrical &amp;. Ftetri~Jerltion
85 - Gener•l Hauling
86 - Mobile Home Rep1ir

Public Notice

cal

Older a.dy would llkl a
ontlomon lor • pon pol, P.O.
ox 52 Pomeroy, OH 45?&amp;8

CARPET CLIAIIERS

THE

-·

SHOE PLACE

Augttst 1-18

Watch m astomshment as Kac hunga. a real
Ame ncan bushman. at tempts to ap prehend
a 9-foot. 300-pound . man eaung alhgator'

72 - Trucks for Sale
73 - Vens e. 4 VVO 's
74 - Motorcyeles

43-Fermt tor Rant
44 - Apertmen t for Rent
46 - Furnishad Roo ms
46 - Sp•c• to' Rent
•? - Wanted lo Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 - For leMe -

rJ'Ae .

1·100..141..0070

and TILE FLOOR CARE

vp

llf111GIIAT011S-$100 up
IANGII-Gn·Dtc......$125
fHEZEIS-$125 up
'
MIUO OVINS- $79 "'

71 - Autot for Sale

•2-Mobila Homes for Rent

Get Reeuf.te Fatt

&gt;SEE OUR NEWT-SHIRTS FOR BACK TO SCHOOL (

OR TOLL fREE

WASHIIS-$100 up

41 - Houses tor ftenl

667- Coolville

Tlger

To OlvNway: 2 H•mplhlre·a .
114-448-45t4 .

•Remodeling end
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

IIEW &amp; USED PARTSlOR
ALL MAlES &amp; MODEU
992·7013
or 992·5553

90 DAY WAIUitiTY

I;Gtjl@ld

8915 - letart

Slblriln Huskey dog, llmalo, 1
yr old to good homo, 304-8751141t

875-6367.

RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

Specializing In
Custofll Fraflle 'Repair

USED APPUAIICES

Transportatinn
R ~~ l EstaiP.

in

7131 /'91 tfn

DIYIS-~6Y

31-Homei lor Sale
32-Mobfle Homn tor Slit
33-flrmt tor Sale
34- Busin•&amp; Bu~dings
36- lotl &amp; Ac:re-ee
31-Real huta Wanud

Saturdly Augull 3nl. FtM
Clothing Doyl At Big Four
Church.

trolnad end very ployl\it, 304-

992-5800

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS ·

DliWIII OliO

18-W.,ted To Oo

21 - Busln•s Opporlunltv
22-MoniY to Lo•n
23-Pro. . lionll Serwlc•

olA:"il
Illa.

Rtgllltrld 1 yr
Nil hound, 30W7

SEE US FIRST!

992-2269

1-100·141-0070

61 - Fa rm Equipment
ti2 - Winted to Buy
63 - Livestoek
64 - Hay a. Grain
65 - Seed &amp; Fe rtililer

15 - Schoole 6 Instruction

M11on Co .. WV
Area Code 304

Pomeroy

BILL SLACK
8- 1

992-7013
or 992-5553
01 TOLL FIR

Farm SttppliP.s
&amp; Ltvestock

Sr. r vt rrs

follou·ing telephonf' exchanges ...
446 - Gallipoli•
367 - Ch•hire

Spoclall:dfll

f mplnynu:nl

.cot·er the

Meigt County

If you're in need
of Mobile Home
Parts or
Accessories .•.

USED RAilROAD TIES

Custom f r - Repair
NEW &amp; US£D PARTS
FO~ All MAKES &amp;
MODRS

53- Antiques
64 - Misc. Merchandise
56-Building Suppll•
66 - Peu for Seht
57 - Musieal lnstrumenl s
58 - Fruitt &amp; Vegetabl•
59 - For Sale or Tr1de

6 - Happy Ads
6- Lost and Found
7 - Yard Stlt(Uid 1n ed'lencel
8-Publtc Sela &amp; Auc:tio n
9 - Wented to Bwy

2·00 P.M FRIDAY

pa~es

Classified

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

AUTO PARTS

82 - Sportlng Goods ,

3 - Annouc•ments

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A.M . SATURDAY
- 2:00PM MONOAY
- 2:00P .M . TUESDAY
- 2:00P .M . WEONESOAY
- 2:00P .M . TMURSDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

HOME PARTS

5

61 - Household Good•

2-tn Memory

polis Daily Tribune, reaching ovoer 18,000 hom"

Area Code 614

Watch Kachunga
Tame the Alligator.

16

992-2403
8-4·'91·1

Mr.rchandtSP.

•A cl .. aified advertisement placed in The Daily Sent•nelte•·
ce_pt - ciMsified display , Bu t ine~; • C1rd and tegll noticesl
w•li al•o appear in the Pt Ple•ant Aegnter and th a Gall•·

Are1Code614

land know n
'
for bullfights
and dancmg. by
VIStttng "Say 51
to Spam :· prese nted by Onega. a 30.000
square foot ex hibit

BOWLING

"ReceNt t .&amp;O discount for ads pa id'" advance

·Free ads - Giveaway ,,d Found edt und• 16 word I will bt
run 3 d-..s 11 no ch•ge.
• Pr~ce of ad tor all capttallttttn 11 doubt a price ot ad cou.
•7 point line type only u18d
•Sentinel is not responsibl e for trrorsa.heJ fint ·dey . (ChecK
for error• fir If ct., ad run• in paper) . Cal1 befOre 2 ·00 p m
d~ after publiclt io n ta m.tce correction
•Ads thlt must be peid in 1dvance ere
Card o f Th.-,ks
Happy Adl
In Memoriam
Yard Sales

•

'l

l!i

"Ads outside MeiQI. Gellie or Maaon eounti• must be pre·
plid.

Sending 'gifts were Chris and
Sara Ball, Ron and Charlotte Hanning, Jack and &lt;;:oke Ambrose,
Bob, Becky and Adam Geyer,
Roger. Tony a and .Bidget Balser
and Stacy Davis.

TRIM and

tor conMCulive runs. broken upd..,swill be c:harged
ads
ae

BULLETIN BOARD

(
•

16

10
Monthly

Galli• County

At thiS
year's fa 1r
you will rravel
to Spain. a

15

6

POLICI

-LAYAWAYS WELCOME-

Celebrate the
Voyages of Columbus.

16

1

3

W. H. MOBILE

380 East 2nd 'St.
992~3432 or

Over 1 5 Words
Rate
.·
.20
54.00
.30
$6.00
. 42
$9.00
.60
1 13.00
.05 / day
$1 .30 / day

Words

Days

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

Giant vege~ables . thnlhng ndes. cheese
on a stick. btg-name entertamment and
muclwnore will fiU the 18 days of the
greatest slate ta1r m the nauon . The Oh10
Slate Fau.
Plan to see OhiO's largest sw me and
stee r listen to bands and choirs. laste your
favo me fa1r food s and feel the thnlls of the
Kroge r Midway
It's all affordable fa mtly fun

POMEROY

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

9 DAYS ONLY! THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 10th

Discover the World's
Greatest Fair.

Tues .• Thurs.,
Fri., Sat. 7:30 p.m.

Open

FrM to good homo: gonlil
Qennon Shtphord . l1~!1'2311 .

SHRUB &amp; TREE
POOL!2!1.LilCHI•lll

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

3e8 - Vinton

Number eight for
Elizabeth Taylor

The

1991

--- -- -·--- -·-- -

·- ---,,-·

,I

_ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._

. . ._

....

_ ~:..~

:.\1-A:

~~~s.....:!

-

---~ -

.,.

.... - - - ........ ...,_....__....

�--· --·-·-- -

'

-

.,

.·
Thursday, August

D-The

Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Pomeroy,
Middleport
VIcinity

35 Lots 8t Acreage
Lota

a.

a acr..ge avallible for

home cORitructlon on
Rayburn Road. Paved road,
county
water,
reaaonable
re1trlctlon1. Complete Inform•·
tlon m11lecl on ~uelto 304-07552.53, John D. Gerlach, no
lllngl•wlde t1'8llllrw, pie....

12 AcrM Parcel Plua Lot, At. 36
Frontagt,·Unreltrlcted l Tarme.

3-Famlly Yard Sale Sot Aug 3hll5pm ONLY, 1611 Uncoln Hilg to
range.

44

e~~meraa,

bieyc14, paparblcka, motom~y.
- n . baby, gl~a and dMig·
nw clothing, cultalne, bedding,
glue...,., mlao.

_,.,,...d,

814 418 0444.

apartment, 2-IR living

Rentals

'----------.,...---------....j

~ 1 clun, 143 outside Har·

otoonvlllo to Conorlll Ad 112 milo,

cloeh&amp;M, houM wall craft eupDllll. lllctrlc -ove, Ukt new,

. littla of everything Aug. 1·2·3.
:1-tomlly yord aalo Aug 1-2-3
:'\;3 B dw 8 1 lllddlo pan
II
rot ay •
'hole.

~~ clothing and houH old

· ~ prd ule at 4&amp;295 Elgie
, Rlclgo Rd. Co. Rd. 32. Shaalo,
· d,.pltl, aprudl, ph• alza cloth·
mena dalhtl. We heve It
- •:00 Au 1 2
.. I =~
g · ·

; ':;R·
'

: Clothing, aoma babY. homo
croR!L mlac, lop of 11 ddloport
: 1111, "''lna pootod Aug 1·2·3
' Dapoaulon Glan Solo. 300 pluo
. ....... IIVI colora, Aug 3,
· t:OOini, Wltlf' strait, Syrtcull.
· Frfclay Aua. 2, lom-lpm largo
· oiH clolhlng, Klhh Ollitr
1
r1.tdlnce, SA" 325, Langavllle,

· OH 114-lU-2071.

~ IIIII Aug 2-3 1:00-5:00,

; blbw' ololhM, lewn tumlture,
, meM a womena, cJothla 341
· Rutllncl 81. Ulddloport, roln or

......

' Johneone 4th ltrMt R•clne,loat
' ol fOOd clean echool elothea,
. bltl, roto tlla.rJ -dlahll and little

. ol ovorythlng, AUO, 1·2·3 II-?
• · - Yord Solei a.- 1·2·3, Poul
~

ur.; ralct.nct, Succ•n Rd.,

. South ofTuppara Plolna, OH.

· ao- 2~ 1 oo-4 00 Lit Circle
~
: ' Cltlldran'a'
fllllllc H Ill:SyracuH,
· lnd ectun'a ck!Chlng, 1oya, 1m111

luggoga corrlor,

U'd' awlmmlng pool, knick·

, l&amp;nlclla, morel14-812·7112.

hleter1 10011 bench, radio's, mat•
II'MI a more, 124 towarda Rut·

lind Po-.

Rolrl or altlnl Wpm F~. l Sol,
.Aua, 24 Sonnr lilcau,. Farm,
Flllacad1 Ad, tolt of mile,
1um, lrl auppllel, clothing.

llarllna ~~~- above Eootom
HlgJt Si:- Aug l-3, t:OD-5pm
cltU', • - · now Blaooll
_
l llllchmo,.a, man,
-....-, hlld
hi

;:=n

c

,.,.. clot ng

llnlahlng, 28951 Boahon Ad,

Rtclne, ot:t, $17,000. CIU 014-Y.'Mn5 0&lt; Ml·:lm.
-;.--·2 1tory 3·BA houH located at

00

COil 1-800-248-3131 (SD.OO/mln)

or write: PASSE, 517

::-:a, Ill ~;~nwey,

612

WN 181

orth

Call 1·800-248-3131 (SO.!IOJmln)
or Write: PASSE 31W, 111 South
Llncolnwa.y, North Aurora, IL
50542.

28421111. 1216.
Port·Timo Employment Poroon
With Plooaont Vo!co For Tolephona Solaa. 614-448-9660 Bot·
W- Wp.m. '
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab
Contor lo occor&gt;Cing oppllcotlona
for lull·tlmo LPN. loluot ba will·
lng to work 11am·7am and 3pm·

11pm. Solory boNd on Ol·

pertenct.
Excellent
btnellt
package. Carol Kanawalaky, AN,
O.O.N., 814·992-1505 or apply In
person al 36751 Rocksprings

Rd., Pomeroy, E.O.E.

The Melga Local
11 currently
pllcallona from
pllctnta
for

School Dlstrlc
..,king apcertified epa
Guidance

CoubMior ot lololgo High School
ond Glrto' Junior High Vollovball

Coach tor the 10G1·1192 achool
year. AppUcanta mutt hold a

St.

lollddlopon.

bam wllh attached faoclllrwck
room and flnced paddock.
Houn hao IIIII baaomont with

GET PAID Ior CompIll no Nomoo
ond Addrwaooo. $500 par 1,000.

lndapandent 1g1nt1 nNded.
Company tralne. $350. 1 day. No
txperJtnce neceuary, Work
from homo or onlce. 1-1~36-

&lt;lront

Sltuatad 011 large double lot
(59'x266') wlttt 2-stlll horN

new roof, fumance, water
huter, and sump pump. M•Y bl
aun by calling 614-i92·3015.
Alklr&amp;!40 •000 · Otflrs accepted
II 1-41 47-7230 ·
2! Acr11, 3br Home, Fish Pond,

ldool For Horaao. 1 IIIIo From
City Limite. 614-4-lf-1340.

3 bedroom houu on 3 acre•, 1
mile out Btulahvllle A011d,
$55,000. exc cond,l't4.448·1568.

3br, 2 Borha, Fomlly Room With
Flreplaco, Bulft In Applloncoo,
Nowly Docorotod Corpat I Cuotom Dropaa.~, CA, Pluo Addltlonol
Dotochod uongo Whh Apartmanl. Will Con1lder lllnd Con·

troct. 114-448-3002.

5 room cozy home, extra lot,

CUlton, olumn oldlng, lronVback
porchu, 304-773-5235 IMvo
measage.

Roducod To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Comar Lot In ChMhlro Ohio.
Excellem Condition. For Finane·
lng, Five Star Mont:P:'· VIckie

Houldron. 614 446
2, Sollor
Will Poy Polntl. 804-1132.0858,
1104~32-7ti10.

GOVERNMENT HOMES form $1
volld Ohlc t11i::hlng cortlllcato (U rtpllr). Delinquent tax
1nd tor coechlng potltlona propenr. Aepoaanaionl. Your
muat m11t certification , . oroa (1 805-962-1000. Ext. GHqulrementa of Ohio for spor1a

10181 lor cunent repo ll.t.

medicine ond CPR. Pon.,. In·
•-••d ohauld contoct Jim

HOUSE FOR FREEII lluot movo
Carpenter, Superintendent of off lol In Mlddlopon. Fill In
llolga Locol Schaoll, 11 P.O. baHmont, oaad ond otrow. Mull
Box 272, 320 Eut Moln St- In algn contract! 2·BR, ~· LR,

for peraon with dtvtlopmtnt•l
dlublllllea In Galli• County

DR, Bath, has new root and gut•
ter, new copper and PVC plumb-Ing, need aomt work. You pay
tor the mo'41ngl Onty Hrloua
ealle,..l Call 814-112·2011 after

'*· ,rt

. . , Solo 37043 Rockopringo
Rd.
l s.t, t-4 pm Rain canu 1 A Au
¥onl8olo 11 117 non ••·· g

-~~

c;:r~

¥ord Sole, Aug1-2-:l at 4th ond
CrQoll SL, Syncuaa. Aoln con:ooto.
Yutl Solo. Rldgowoy''!z RT. 7,
!rom ForNI •un Rd,
•- 1-2., N
...,.
' ·
Public Sale
8
&amp;Auction
Rick Peareon AucUon Compt~ny,
fuU time auctlonHr, complttl

Solo On All Corpot l VInyl Floor

ml hom Holzar Hoephal, SA \SO,

614-742-27:18.

ochldulod.
Currwnt
LPN
Ueanoo, (lntorim ParmK. Accoi&gt;- 32 Mobile Homes
toblo),
OOPNESINAPNES/or
Stoto Board opp-ovod tnlnlng 1
for Sale
volld drlvor'o Uconeo end gooa
d~vlng roconf, good com- SSOO Down On Solact R•munatlon •nd or'/anlzatlon MINd Mobile H01011. FrM Set
akllla, punctual, an

abla \o

Up

aona with ment•l retardation

And

Delivery.

Financing

.

Robat.On Any 1IKIO Or
Lot Model AI Elaao Homo

1~~~~~~::&amp;~Do:ll:v•:ry~.
1~

(FI'H Porch) Buy 1 Now Skyllno
28x52 Soctlonol And Got A
10hrt81t. Anochod Porch FrMI
Fronch Clly llobllo Homoo, 61414
Business
448~340. Limited Tlmo oHorl
Training
14170 Troller wtlh oundraom,
dock, corport, 3 outbuildings
Rotroln
NowiiiSouthoootom ona wllh collor undor ~.over 32
Bulin- Colle., Spring Volloy 112 acru whh goo woll 614-247Ploza. Coil Todly, 614·446,.36711 2622
Roglotorotlon fi0-05-1274B.
186V Parklll111a 12160, 1974
18 wanted to oo
Kant 12158 both tor 525001 sR
124 pall llcohor Cupboara 111
Will Bobya~ In lly Homo rd. on loll 1 milo ou1 Ponlond
Anr.lmo.
Rodney
Arwo. Rood Roclno, wotch lor algna
Ra oroncaa Avollablo. All Shllto. on right.
Coii8M-241.-57Ba.
1870 Wlndoor, 12lcU wnlp-out,
Buth ~ S1rvlc1. Reaaonabla

refrlger•tor and atove. NHdl:

-

W11kenda

haul your loQI to the mill Juat

VOid. 7:3011114:00, 304-67$-7588.

W.nltd all lunk end ac:rap met11,10"-'11~31.

Wonted to buy, Stondlng tlmbar,
lob WUIIama l Sona 614-IKI2·

.

Top PrieM Pold: All Old U.S.
Co4111, Gold Ringo, Dlomonda1
lllvar Colna, Storll~, Gcla
Co1M- II.T.S. Coin Snap, 151
INOndAv.,.., Golllpollo.

Emp loyment Services

Hauling
end
p1lnllng at
r11aonable ratea, 814·H2·24i2.

New Carpet, Blocka Skirting,

Bx16 Porch, $8,000. 614-2588339.

1981 Patrtot, 3br, 2 Full Baths,
CA, Already In Mobile Homa

I WMI Bobylh In Your Homo On Park. 614,.46-1874, Ahor 7p.m.
Late

Afternoons,

And Evonlnga. Golllpollo Aroo. 3br, 1 112 Both Locotod Pine
Coll114-4411-ttM.
StrMt, Noxt To Holrhlll. 614·2468440.
Local Truek Driving or Farm

Work. COII814-388-870G.

3Br, lloblla Homo 2 Bllho,
Uvlng Room, In Contanory. Aplllao Paula'a Doy Corw Contor. prox1 Aero. 114-441-1545.
Solo, offordobto, chlldcoro. M-F
6 1.m.• 5:30 p.m. Ages 2~10. New 1112 14x80 thi'M bedroom,
Boloro, oftor achool. Drop-Ina 2 lui batho, ahlnglo roof, vinyl
• .. ....
aiding,
lhutta,.,
urpttld
woleomo. • 1. ••I 8224. Now In- throughou1, oil drywall Interior
tant Toddler Care, 814-448-8227.

and 3-bay window. $17,1187.00.

Will Bobyoll In lly Homo, Juot
OH 180, On Bulovllla. Hovo E1parlance And Roforoncoa. 614448·2648.
Will bvlld patio covaro, dackl,
.crHned rooms, put up vinyl

Coll1-800-'12i-4045.
N- Skyline 14x10, 2br Front
Kllchon, VInyl Sldln",
Shl~lo
Roof,
Spalcll: • $18, 5,
Dollvorod l Sot. French Clly
Mobile Hom11. 814~8340.
Offer• 1cc1 ptld tor 1082 mobile

II~ trlllar aklrtlng. 814·
homo 14x70 wHh 12124 ••·

24

Ftnanctal

Help Wanted

AVON • AI liMO, Coli llorllyn
Woavar :IOM62-2M5.
POMEROY
'POSTALJO""
ti\7Hl4.10 "'·No .... noodod.
Fer ...., and oppllcotlon Info.,
oall 141_.,-tfit 7a.m.-10p.m.

apai11T11nt; all utllhlta paid, $200
month, 614-t02·5803 or 141-

21

vry.,..

Good

Quiet

!p.m.

2 BR lllrnlthod opanmont. Ronl,
$285 par month. Some ulllltloo.
614-446-2404.
2·BR lllrnlohod opa~mont $300
1 monlh, on u11tftlu paid, 614IKI2-5603 or Mll-2526.
2nd St. lllddlopon, 2-BR, living
room, dining room, kitchen ana

both, tot floor, nowly docorolld.
COli 614-IKI2·2403 or 1182·2780.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 636 Jockoon Plko
from $182/mo. Walk to ahop .&amp;:

movloo. Coli 614-448-2566. EOH.
B-h Stroot, lllddloport, Ohio.

One room eftlciency apt,
reflrencH and dtpoalt, 304·

882-2586.
Comar Coal ond 3rd lllddlopon

1·BA, living room, kitchen 1nd
bath, 1at tloor, newly decorated.

Coli 614-IKI2-2403 0&lt; IKI2-2780.
Effk:lancy Apanmont, Fur-

nllhlcl, O.poah, &amp; Aetarenca
Required. No Polo, 614-446,.871.
For rent, 1 bedroom apanmenl,

$228 u111hlaa Included, dopoolt
rwqutrod, no para, 1144V2-2218.
Fumllhld ADIIrtmant, 1br, $235
Utii~IM Pokl. 820 Fourth Avo,
Golllpollo. 114 448 4416 ohor
7p.m.
Nicely Fumlohod Apartment,

1br, next to Ubrary, parking,
cantral heat, alr1 ,.terence ,.,.

qulrod. 614-448-Go38.

Fumlahed efficiency wlatovt &amp;

rwlrlgorata&lt;. Shore bath. 1118 2nd
Avo. S100 Po&lt; month. All UIIIKioo
Pold. 6M.C48-3MS.
Fumllhld EHicloncy, $150
Utllhloo Pold, Shlrw Both, 701
Fourth, Golllpotlo, SM-448-«18
oltar 7p.m.
Gracloua Uvlng. 1 and 2 bad·
room apartmonto ot Vlllo9•
llonor
ond
Rlvorol •
At&gt;~rtmonla In lllddlaport. From
JIM, Coli 614-IKI2-7787. EOH.
LIIIYIIII IIIII: ~br, 2 Borha, All
Utllhlaa lncluaoa. $425/mo.
~ RoqUiroct. No Poto. 614'146·1733, 114-44...222.
llodorn 2·BR oportmont In Mlcf.
diopon. ~· , oqulppod
khchen, de
t, rtltrtOCI r-.
qulred,

14-llf.o«48

pando, 3 bldr00fn8, 2 hthe,
rur1l w.ter, approved eeptlc

1:00pm.

2

reference, 304-182·2588.

after

awotom, good neighborhood, e New Haven, 2 bedroom fur112 mlloolrom Point Ptaaaant Rt. nished apartment, dtpoalt and

Business
Opponunlty

North.

Approx

2

acrea,

$16,000. Lind only $10,000. 6144411•7907 lor oppoinlmont.

$1U8 Waak.OPEN: Mondoy
Thru Soturday, eo.m. to lp.m.1

cond, 1250. obo, 304-f75.2821.
Sot Judy Rankin Golf lronr,
Woodo, Sh- Size 6, Bog 6
Glove. Llka Now, Uo~ Twice.
$1SO. I14-448-11220.

55

Solid 01k bid room eutte, 304-

67$-3431 onar 6:00 Pll.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Golllpollo. Now a Uaod
furniture, hntel'l, W11tam

a

Work boola. 114-448-3158.
Twin bod with mottrOII, $75.
304-675-1100.
.
VI'RA FURNITURE
614..48-3158
LIVING ROOM: Solo l Chair,
$100.00;_ Rocllnor, $141.00;
Swivel Hocktr, $80.00; Coffaa 6
End Tobloo, $8V.OO Sot.DINING
ROOM: Tobie With 4 Padded

73

1100 Oliver Tractor With Big
Vorrnoar Round Bolar, $4,8M;
1480 Ollvar Dleall, $3.150; 1130
Mo-. 13,150; T030 Forguoon
Whh Turf TlrM. Ownar Will
FlrtiCL 114-21W622.
1m Stock Trolllr, M~ 1 $1,1K15; 2
Yoar Old A0NA Folly with 1 Ho~
tar Point, 10 Big Uaad Sbow
Soddlat, Hood Stolle, l Brooot
Strope. Co~ Elrllne'a DIICOIMII
Soddlery, 614-216-1522
Jlm'a Form Equlpmo,., SR. 35,
GoiiiDOIIa, &amp;M-448-11177;
Wide -Jon now l uaod form
tractora l lmplomonta. Buy,

Building
Supplies

Livestock

.,..,....,.,-:-:-...,..,.-,-""""'"
1-lloglatorod Arabian Horae for
..... 614-112-5802.

Groom and SUp!lll Shop-Pot
Grooming. All flrHlla, IIYIII.
loma Pol Food Dallor. Julia
Wabb. Coli 1 - 3 1 , 1-100362.0231.
11-boby Poococko for HIO, $15
Nch, 614-1186-3558.
Chalra, $14G.OO: Country Pine AKC
Roglllorod
lllnohwo
Dlnotto With Bench And 3 Schnouzor, Soft, 6 Popper
Cholra,_ $2IKI.OO; llotchlng 2 Color. 1 YNr Old. Shots,
Door Hitch, S341i Or $581.00 Poparo. Houaa Broken. 614-448Sot; Ook Toblo 1 42lc62 With 6 11111, 114-448-Gl:ZS.
Bow
BacK
Chalra,
S&amp;28.00.BEDROOII: Pootor Bod· Cockltlol Blrdo1 white $45 or
room Sullo (S pc.), $341.00; 4 gnoy $35, 114-M•2104.
Drawer Chelt, f44.0S; Bunk Dog ond Cot grooming oll
Bod, $2211; Comploto Full 11oft
Sot S105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Coder brMdo, opaclallzod In Poodio
BOdroom Sullo, $8IKI.OO.OPEN: m~ yra ............
Monday Thru SaturdaY. ILm. to

&amp;p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till
Sp.m., 4 lllln Off Route 7 On
Route 141 In Clnl1011ry.

Whirlpool Wllhlr1 aosi Kenmora dryer, $75; Kenmore dry.,.,

Fllh Tonk, 2413 Jacklort Avo.
Point P_,., 304-67$-20113,
us - g•• dryar, u; Cold Spot lull
line Tropical lllh1. blrda,
rolr 1
g., H, ft25; Copaprtono Ad· amoll onlmolt ond auppl101.
mlrol rolrlg, ff, S150.; Wltlrtppol
ralrlg, $121; lrMr.r, upright, Frwnch lop bunnies, 5 w"ka. old.
.
$150; While tiiC. range. ,15; $10 NCh. IM_.__
May11g wringer wuher, •qu•e
Poodlo
puDDIM,
toyo~ ond 111
tub, fiSO. Sl&lt;lg~ tftpllancoa, cupa, AKC ·e.wnp~on •toodllne,
Uppar Rlvor Rd. f~ f-73111.
alao Mln'-tuN Schnluzere,
Cootvllla IM-II7-M04.
52 Sponlng Goods
PoodloAICC
puDDIM.
Broom Nondlo llouoar 163 ~ cupa,
'Cftamllloit
tot,
S1,000i..
Springfllld Coolvllla 1f.W17.)404.
Automollc 22 $IV; Noralco AK47,
8 eoxn or Shalla $300; Portcor PuDDIM. I - " " old, mottwr
Brothoro Double 6orrot1 $1,000; AK'C: Toy Poocla, lothar Frlooo
LIFovor Double lorrll, •100. All
~~··· 3 ....... S50. 304-816Guna Nice CondHionl Fa&lt; Solo 3693.
or Trado. 614-258-1270.
Roglllarod I Month Old Block l
Wtiltt Cockor Sponlel Puppy,
Antiques
53
614-245-MOl
Antique OreaMr, With Marble Roglatorod AKC, Poodle Pupo
Top, And Condie Holdaro. 614- plaio. Wll Bo Roody To Soli: July
245-6162.
28th,
111t1.
614-388~81 1
Antiquo Fumhuro Rapalroct: Anytlma.
Limp• Rewired. (21 Yurw Ex· 58
Fruits
parionco) W. Wh~o, 114-2488441.
Vegetables
Buy or aoll. Alvarl,. Anllquoa,
1124 E. Uoln Slrwll, Pomeroy. Conning lorniOIM otroody
Houra: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 pic'""' or plok y - own II
g;:~~~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. - · · " ' " " · 114-24MN1.
Canning Torut-11 lldntl contllnar. h-YOU fliCK! tl WE
PICK! Mo,.,..l AUN, Lolort

s

toyo.,:::...::

a.

miiH, runa end looks good,

$1,100. 304-576-2737
1883 Chivy 20 Sarloo Glodlotor
Convaralori Von Automotlc,
Crulao, Air, Aiiifll Cooaotta,
$5,200. Soli Or Tndo. 614-258·
1270.
18M Toyota Pickup, 5 opaod,

414. 72,000 mll11, $4,200. :J04.

Hay

a. Grain

Want to buv 2 lor111 round baln
011 hoy, 304-182-:1117.
Premium 3n:l cutting Alfalfe,

llorgon Form, 304~37-2018.

i.':."&amp;Jm~~ Ql., AC, Newly Pelntld,
LaQrondo Blvd. 61H48-137l
:111r

Houoa

Whh

Anochod

..

MOftNtf'IG.
"'''H·•WES

8-

I

500 Shadow1 e,ooo lllioi, $1,500,

Nogotloblo. oM-448,.238.
Dirt Blko: 1875 Yomaha MX400,

ANI Good TlrH, low Houra On

Englno, Bike In Good Shape!
$250, 114--~2027 after 7 p.m.

Transportation

75 Boats 8t Motors
71 Autos for Sale
===-::--.--::--::::-:::'15 !Jodgo Omnl, AT, PS, PB,
AIIIFII co_,, o1c cond,
14,000 miiM, $1,500. 304-67$4376
·

1m

Codltloc,

Deville, 87,000

4-dr

Sodon

actual mll11,

good cond, $600 obo IM·IKI2·
6525.
1m Buick 2dr Herd Top,
Emoculoto Condition. 60,000
IIIIM. All Orlilnal. Loaded,
Souttwn Car, 13,000. 8144462300.
1876 Sulek Lo Sobre, 53 000 octual mll"!'1 now llkrM1 ,!1J~ $800.
or beat oner,304-111-owv.

l'lbuln motor, matching num·

1m

Oldai Cutla.., 4dr, Sedan.

96,000 Mltn. 814-4411-3287.
1f711 Chryalor Cordoba 360,
auto, new everything, $1400.
doyo 114-11112-2165'. ohor 5:30pm,
coU304-t76-t855.
1m Plymouth Votarl, atant 8,
low mlloo,

304-67$-5080.

1188 Buick A••• whh v-e. ssoo.
304-773-5888.
1880 Pinto Stollen Wogon $1200.
1871 Uncoln $1100, 114-114112804•

1181 Coolllaa Sidon Saville,
New tlrw1, Brakn, BatJery,
70,000 llllaa. $2,000. Firm. 614317-G586.
18t111onto Carte, 304-676-1501.
1182 Comf'2&amp;o v.e, auto, rod,
muotaao,
,_moy Indo, 6141112-:1367 or 1112-ZIM.
1VI2 FalrmonJ 4dr, Looka Good I
Auna Goodl$750. 114-21&amp;-1332.
1814 LTD Ford llotlon wagon,
$800. 304-67W458.

1915 Clruro Z21, loaded,

IXC

oond, $4,100. 304-67U1211.
11115 Volkowogan For, 4 door, 4
ar&gt;aa&lt;l, AC, 42,000 mllu,,.,zoo.
304.075-3371ah• 4:00PM.
18$8 ChiVIIIo,_ 4 Spaod, Air
Condnlonod, !Aood Condition!
ft,IIIIO. 114-26M2h
liN Chov.- Covolllr, 30467$-3424.
.

till• Night Court r:;1

(i) (I) II lnaldo Edition
(!) (f) MaeNaii/Lahrer

_ _ _ _....;,._,; ldiiOtl

O Rearrange

Auto Parts
Accessories

73-8'1

Chevrolet

truck

hood

I· i I f I; I I
L

Budgot Tronamlttlona, Uaod 6
robvln, llanlng ot SIKI: Auto
Porta. 6111-245-5677, 614-37112263.

79

1879 21ft. Coaclvnon Compar
Whh AC, Awning, Vary Good
Cond~lon. $3,100. 114-388-8854.

Services
81

FOR A SMA.I..l"Jt::'NN, we

Home
Improvements

HA~

A PRE:TTY
LIVEI...Y NIEiHT-

All typa of maaonry, brtck,
block and ltont. Fr11 ea·
tlmatn. 304-m-a550.

ATIA

CONSTRUCTION

L..IFE.

CO.

Rlsldontlal, commorclal, farm, ,
.custom
home1,
additions, ·
remodeling,
bualneae·
renovatlona. Eatlmatn on ,... !

614-237-0488,

doy

or night.

aorta. Rutonablt rat11. Call
anytime. 114·742-1400 or OG2-

3440.
Complete Uoblla Homo Sot-Upe, ·

YOU BEEN WORKtN'
LIKE A DOG
SINCE SUNUP!!
YOU NEED
SOME TIME
OFF!!

GIVE ME
THAT THAR
CHOPPtN'
AX!!

Clolmo kcoplod. 614-258·1611.
Curtlo Homo lmprovomonta: ·
YHrl Exparlanc:a On Old or 6 ~
Nawar Homoa. Room Addltlono, ·
Foundollon Work, Roollr~g, ~
Wlnclowa I Siding. FrH &amp;-,
tlrnltoal RatarancoO, No Job Ta,
Big Or Smolll 614-olft-0225.
'
JET

Aeration Motor., repaired. New

ASTRO·GRAPH

Ron'a TV Sarvlco, apaclollzfng
In Ztnllh alao aorvlclng moa1
other brenda. Houu calli. •lao
IOml IPPIIanctl ~C~t wv

Cortar'o Plumbing
ondHMtlno
Fourth ond PTne
Golllpotlo, Dhlo
614-448-3886
El.e ctrlcal

a.

oond., tt260.114-388-150t.

p;j

tm I'Ord Ro-; F·100~Jruck

Cub Co~ With 1876 v.. ""~~'""·
112 Tan, PI, PI, An. Two DOora

Roal,_ntlal or oomrn.rclal
wiring, now aarvlco or ropalro.
llo...r · Uconaod ollct~clon.
Rldonour Eloct~l, 304-676·
1786.

ff7

Upholstery

-roy·a Upftofllorlng aorvJc.
Whh Lay Down' Sock 8111. Folr lng trf county orao 26 yoaro. Tho
In lllmllurw upftofotorlng.
Condhlon, Coil Anytlmo. 304- COli' 304-e75-4114 lor lraa . .
458-1111.
tlmotM.

a

famous artist dies. his wile is
accused of murder. (PI 6 of

O'Neill Rosie meets a
psychiatrist who can help her
cloent. (R) Stereo. t:;l
tilliD Beverly Hilla, 90210 ·
Brandon's friends become
suspects in a beach club
robbery. Starao. D
i1J MOVIE: Two Mulea for
Slater S.ra (PGI (2:00)
at Naahvllle Now Stereo .
ID Top Rank Boxing
Lightweight bout: Todd
Foster (19·0, 15 KOs) vs.
Felix Gonzales (18·9. 15
KOs). 10 rounds, lrom Butta.
Mont. (L)
.
18 Lorry King Llvel
9:30 (%) D 11J Wingo Helen
catches flying laver after
being at Joe 's ~lane controls .
(R) Stereo. t:;1 '
10:00 (%) D 11J L.A. Low Van
Owen faces a military
tribunal when she delends a
soldier. (Rl Stereo. r:;1
(i) (I) 11 Ptlmatlme Live

BARNEY

Rorlre; Commarlul, Rtald•ntla Improvement•. Including:
Plumbing, Electrical. lnaurance

l ro-bviH motora In atock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. t-100537-1528.

scheme. (R) Stereo. r:;1
II]) II) True Colora Lester is
lorn between datln.Jj_ two very
different girls . (R) 0
12!1 American Mualc Shop
18 Wor In the Gull: A Look
8eek
9:00 (%) D 11J Cheara Sam
Injures his back on the way
to his annual tryst with
Lauren . (R) Stereo. 0
(i) (I)
Father Dowling
Myatatloa A mummy's curse.
art forgary and a sting
operation lead to murder. (R)
Stereo. g
(!) (f) Myeteryl When a

6)Q

Aoge,. Buament Waterproo-

fing.
Corpantry ond romodollng ol oil

Tile Slmpaona Lisa

1mJ 11J Ill Trtala of Roala

qu ..r. 304-676-3156.
BASEMENl
WATERPROOFING
Uncond~lonol IWotlmo guoron- ·

t11. &amp;.oc.l rtf.,.ncta tumlahld. ·
FNI MtlmltH. Call collect 1·

7:05 (]) Tlte Jofferaona
7:30 !liD IIJ Jeopardy! 0
!Il Andy Otlfflth
(i) Ole Enter-telnment
Tonight Stereo. r:;l
(I) D Mama'a Family
1mJ W""l of Fortune 0
till Ill M'A'S'H
12!1 Be a Star Stereo.
1D PIA Bowling Bud/ ABC
Masters Toumamentlrom
Toledo, Ohio (R)
18 Croaallra
7:35 (]) Andy Otllflth
8:00 (%) D 11J Coaby Show Cliff
and Russell reminisce about
the great old days ot
baseball . (R) Stereo. r:;1
!Il Major League Beaebell
Texas Rangers al Chicago
While So• (L)
(i) (I) fll Gabriel' a Fire Bird
becomes jealous of
Josephina alter she starts
dating. (R) Stereo. r:;1
aJ On the Waterways
Stereo.
(f) lillian Cooking lor a
Healthy Heat1 Quick and
easy dishes including
desserts and snacks are
prepared with attention to
recommendations by the
National Cholesterol
Educational Foundation .
(1 :00)
®I Qllll Top Copa A man
sets his house on lire over a
domestic dispute. (R) Stereo .

over a money-making_

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Get a jump on lile by understanding the
Influences governing you in the year

ahead . Send lor Leo's Astro-Graph predictions today by mailing $1 .25 plus a
long. sell-addressed. stamped envelope to Astro-Graph , c/o !his newspa-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

per, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland . OH
44101-3428 . Be sure to state your zodiac sign.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You may lack
the ability lo see the error of your ways
today , but you could have an extremely
critical eye lor finding lauits in others.

tl

This is not a formula for popularity.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be extremely

carelul as to whom you delegate authority today, because a poor choice
c;;ould force a commitment on your be-

Aug. 2, 1981
It looks like you may be' given greater

responslbllilies In your chosen field or
endeavor. in the year ahead. Perform up
lo your capabilities, beCause i1 could ol·
fer substantial rewards over a protract·
ed period of time.
.
LEO· (JIIIJ 23-Aug. 221 Someone With
whorl you were once very tight Is beginning to lose patience wit~ you: lhla per·
son resents being taken lor granted
lately. Some fence-mending 18 118eded.

hall. that you· d never agree to In person.
SCORPIO (Oct. ZC.Nov. 22) Family
members, Including yourself. might be a
trifle edgy today. Be very carelul that
you don't do something without think·
lng that could raise their boiling points.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) II
posalble, try 10 temporarily shelve tasks
or assignments that you find extremely
distasteful today. Doing work you diS·
like tends to create results thai aren 'I
up to par.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22•Jon. 11) Business and pleasure might not mix too
well today, so think lwlce before pitchIng a deal In a social selling. Your

chance at making a sale doesn 't look

Stereo. C
(!) (f) Aflve From Off Center

good. •
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) In your
last-minute elfort to catch up on things

1mJ 11J Ill Stephen Klng'a

you 've left undone this week . you may
start cracking the whip over others in-

s1ead or yoursell. Whopping the wrong
horse won't save the day.
PISCES (Feb. :ZO.March 20) Don't misread your feelings of apprehension as
Intuitive hunches today . The first comes

lrom negalive thinking and Is not relaled to the latter.
ARIES (Morch 21-April19) Try to be as
prudent as possible in your leisure ac-

tivities today. II you don't keep a lid on
your wallet. you might spend much
more than you anticipated .
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) You may
get Involved with several people who. in
regard to thalr objectives. aren 't in har·
mony wllh one another. It could Impede
1your progress regarding something you
wanl to do.
GEMINI (M8y 21..,_ 20) A Similar Sit·
uatlon to one you didn't handle too well
recently might present Itself today. II
you're not thinking, you may make the
same mistakes you did previously.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Thlals not a
good day lo poke your nose Into an altair that a lrlend Is trying to keep secret.
II this Individual wanted you to know,
you would have been briefed .

A

ll·Yi'1lj
0 R 0 WL s

I I I I I

1.,; ~t-1.

8

Sign posted on outs kirts ol
rural
town,
"
Welcome
Speeders! We Are ------- To
Meet You!"

ENLIBB
IG) Compleoe
t---,I""G-,.1,-1--,1-.,17:-i
I
.

.

8

.

.

.

.

rho chu ckle Quolod

by ft l!,n~ in the m•u•ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN fHESE SQUARES

C) ~~~c:~~!~ER LETTERS TO

IIII IIII
J-s I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Should - Offer - Fetal - Weapon - ON HERSELF
"Push this button and a light will go on in the hall for
the nurse," the old man was instructed . " If the nurse
needs a light," he barked , "she can turn it ON HER SELF! "

SporiiContor

Mllllona (2:00)
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Melvin and
Howard (R) (2 :00)
8:30 !liD 11J Different World
Whitley and Dwayne clash

8125 after 5:00.

lerters of the

low to form folJr simple words

NewiHOUI r:;l
®I Ole current Affair r:;1
iiJ MacGyvor r:;1

18 P~meNewa
0 MOVIE: Brewater'a

$50.00, n~ Chevrolot bedside,
paaHnger aide, $50.00 614-0D2·

'·

lour ocromblod wordo be-

r:;1

g
Murder, She Wrote r:;1
12!1 On Stage Stereo .

a.

76

tAll I

CLAT I. 'OUAN

~y

0

ol pirating cable . (R) Stereo.

61H48-8052.

"""'"'

•uto.., 4 WD, PfJ.1118, rul

•

convinces Homer of the evils

16ft. Tr'-Htul 50 Hot'H Chryslar
Engine &amp; Tr1iler, Good Shtpe!

Ohio I
2454.
1ta Aenaun Alllanc., uc cond,
auto, 1lr, AM.f'M, $1,100. 304· Soptlc Tonk Pumping SlOeOolllo
178-1238.
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
1111 B,.,_ R,_~y olllroa, 1 Jocklort, OH 1-800-637~1528.
owner, low ml--v-, renlnaer Dovla
-Voc
Sarvlco,
of aJdenc»d warranty available. a-gao Crook Rd. Pono, oupo
61-4-441.(1811.
plloa; pickup, end delivery. 6141111 Pontile Suttblrd LE, 2 448-0ZM.
- · lopa:t4~ ~~000 mlloa, 82
Plumbing 8t
ott.r
4:-M.
Heating

sae

1

8:00 !liD (i) (I) II ®I IIJIII
IIJ Newa
!Il Andy Ortflltlt
(!) Club Connect
(f) Reading Rainbow r:;1
II]) II) Andy Griffith
i1J C.t1oon Expreot
ID TltoroughbM Oigeat
18 World Today
Clll Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop r:;1
8:05 (]) S.wltchod
&amp;:30 !liD IIJ NBC Ntwa r:;1
!Ill Draam of J.annla
(i) (I) D ABC Ntwa r:;l
(!) Wild Ametlca r:;l
(I) 3·2·1 Contact r:;1
®I IIJIII CBS Nowa r:;1
11])111 WKRP In Cincinnati
1D Up Cloaa
Clll New Zono Stereo. r:;1
8:35 (]) Andy Griffith
7:00 ~ D IIJ Wheal of Fortune

RIll

for Sale

304-87ti~3111

1m Joop Dick-up, 310 motor

3M Coplar Model 818. Priced To
Still Frwnch City Mobllo - · ·
614-448-11340.

[?t~SOfoiALITY

GET fTAP.TF()
11'1 'THE

1866 Sllzultl llotorcyclo 125,
St- Or Dirt Blka. 1,300 Mllao,
Like Nawl114-21&amp;-1560.

AVON I AI AnNa I lltklaw

Unhl'lllaltotl oparttltllll, 2nt!
llo«, POfiti!OY. 4-Aooma, both.
No pall. Rolw.,.. ond dopoal1,
114-IKI2-22711oftar 1:30pm.

you~

Motorcycles

Refrigeration

~-:-:-----31 Homes tor S.ale

f•T

Tl"f.AT~ H#P ~

7252.

84

Estate

IN THicT CAsE/ .X. GUfft'
£0Qicll'l6 ~ Otlf

Wf IIAvt
A C:AR To

For Good Plck.Up Truck, Equal
Voluo. 614-256-1064.

1VBO Choppor Hondo Englno,
$1,200. Coli Allor 4p.m. &amp;M-448-

Folia,-

Real

AUTO/

1181 Aeroat1r XLT, AC, PW, POL,

Roglat- Anguo liNing holloro
end bvlla for Hl4. Orool broocf.
lng arock ond very tome. Priced
upon lnopactlon, '14-1112·3033.

7dap.

lpoaN,104-1'11-M28.
CAINAY WORKERS ALAS~
11rtng Wontlrt. Up To $800
-lp. T,.,.orrotlon, ......
Ina. CAU. NOW 1·206-731-70011
Eil11841S.
.
CAHNIAY WQRKiRSIALASKA
~11oww-. Up to seqG

FRANK AND ERNEST

67$-3375 oltor 4:00PM.

74

""!""_T4apa, SM-t'l$-5332 or
61......·3488.
1m Lincoln 4dr Town Cor.~,folr
Cond~lon, $1,500, Or Blll1 unort
614-446-11104.

Pets for Sale

• whHI drive, wari good, 87,000

Jaraay Cow, 114-115-3641.

tara, Ale Orondo, ott Coli 614241-112\

56

1879 Good Elllonolon Dodge
Von. ti,IKI5. 614-245-5152.
1876 Jaop, 304 engine, 3 opaad,

Trede: 1G78 150 Econollne Van,

olpao, wln-

dowa, llnt.aa, etc. Cl•uda Win·

a. 4 WD's

387-o512.

Sol Ull Noon.

11711 Corvot ,.w paint ond llroa,

Block, brick, -

Vans

.a1, tr•de, 1:00.5:00 WNkdaye, Good Condition, $5,300. 614-

64

AUG.

EVENING .

ID

Farm Equipment

63

•

THU ••

Sentlnei-Page-11

S©Rc(llA-l£ £trs· watt

18 Moneyllne
Clll Searecrow and Mra. King

~
aoUnln-Jlng draa, alza !:.~8r"o~'1&gt;s",;j,2 :re.g~~
,., worn
une wedding, 11c. 318-atcM after 7 p.m.

Covarlng In 9tockl MoUohsn Topper for lonft bod amoll
Corpato, At. 7 North, 114-448- · pickup $100. Sot ha dlah wllh
11144.
maah wire romota control l equipment t500. 304-812-2010.

Singer Touch ond Sow mochlna,
$125. ~76-6822.

61

Television
Viewing

?1J

Farm Supp li es
&amp; Ltvestock

Merchandise

C.

Neighborhood. Roforonco, &amp;
Dopoa~.
614-448-1310 """'

etatf mHtlng; one-hour wHkly
LPN meeting: or •• otherwt11

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Waaher,

tront, carport, ·112 blumant,

coll304-676·1l5l

1182-211111.
PI,. poeta, llcAnhur Lumbar
and Pool Co, Inc, Southaldo, WV

·

8-8p;m., Sun; 2-hour waakly hardwood flool"', 110 acr11, 3o-

8:30p.m., Frl; Ba.m.-5p.m., S.t;

Country lloblto Homo Pork,
Routa 33, North of Pomoroy.
Lola, rwntola, pane, aolel. Coli
614-IKI2·11179.

h12 Rug. lhod• Of ltuo l
Sind. Woahabfo, Uko Howl 614441-0616.
3 bedroom houu, Park Drive
Point Ploaaant, nleroncu and
Bhlmo Btoot, llln crulao-ltotol
dtpoall, 304~75-1242.
packogo, Florida to Bahlmoo
3 bedroom houu, Nterenee ,.. 51
Household
S218. par couj&gt;lo, e do;;;J
qulroct, $350. month, 304-676nlghlo. Ouolhy hotel, AmHod
Goods
3869
oupply, good lor 1 yr. 404-1128.
18 cubic foot chnt frHzer. 37!11.
4th St. Middleport. Sm1ll house,
Good
cond. Coil ohor e p.m., Concrota l r&gt;l!lallc aaptlc tanlto,
~BR, living room, kltchan, balh,
614-448-2048.
Ron · Evona Entot'llrlloa, Jack·
nlca lot. fftnt ot atll. NHds 1
111111 work, call 614-192-2403 or
32 cu ft Up~ght doop lr-o, _,, OH 1-100-137-tl28.
982-2780.
very good conct, $200, 814-112· For Solo: Fuol 011 Fur,.co Tank
6584
Nice HouHin Country For Rant,
• oa. Coiii14-446-0IM1.
$2SOimo. 614-378-2744.
ALL WOOD KITCHEN CABS
Hell lon:od olr otactrfo ........
Now l Uaad. Frao Eot-Trodo wo1&gt;'- · I lllmonta 24 000
Ina. Mayo ICJtchena, I'~C-~88- wott, tt'hs. oltar 8:ooi!M, 30'4':
62110.
87$-51113.
42 Mobile Homes
Hla and hare old IIYio blcyclel,
Coptlona
bod
w~h
$350.
lor Rent
304-671.-76M.
130. aach, 304-671-M11.
'74 New Moon, 2 bedroom, County Appllonca Inc. Good Konmora Waahw l Dryer Uaod,
$3,500. 304-e75-1211S.
ulod applloncu, T.V. alta. Opan Good Condition! 1250. 614-448o.m. to 6 p.m. llon..Sot. 614- 11340.
2 bedroom Aohton Ur,lond Ad, I4411·1680,
$166. mo. pluo utlllt 01, $100. llpolla,OH 127 3rd. Ava. Go~ Lorge oHice 1111 on rollora
depoalt, no peta, 304.fi75-4088.
tumblor comblnall"!!z $4SO. cod
USED APPUANCES anar e:oo PM. 304-flll-1208.
2 BR mobile home nur GOOO
waehel"', dryers, re""'ll'ltort,
Evergreen. 614-3711-2678.
rongos. Skogga APIIIIancoa, Hully Scout 10 apaod, I
2br Furnlohod or Unlumlohod, Upper Rlvor Ra. Baolda Stone Murroy Sebring 10 _.t. 1144411-10811.
Cloy Chopal Rood, $250 Ront, Croll llotol. CIIIIM-448-73111.
$250 Dopoolt, Plus Utlfltloo,
Plftobvrgh Point lntarlor llot won
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
Roloronco. 614-258-6408, 614Complete homo luml•~'~i:· paint $10.41 •'· lntarlor .... ~
258-6718.
S13.80 _got1 _ oxtarlor flit
Hourw: Men-Sat, t-5. 11
paint ft3.n. 2415 Jock·
3--BR, fumlthed; waahar/dryer, 0322, 3 miiM out Butovllla Rd.
_, Avo, Point Plouont, .Pt. Pit.
FrHO.Ilvory.
AC, 6M-w.l-5800.
304.071-4014.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Mobile Homn For Rent, conPortobfo llghlod chlngaoblo lotNowo\lood
atruct(on WOrklfl lnd Hud Wll·
olgn
$281.
Froo
HouHhold tumlahlng. 112 mi. tor
come. 114-44G-G508 or 44H32t
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. PtHaant, WV, dollvary/loltorw. Ploatlc lottoro
Nice 2 btdroom1, l•ro• yerd, coli 304~76-1450.
$47.50 box. 1--.&amp;3$-3483.
210 Perch St. Kanauga, 814--446Uaod R65 ctltchwKch tronl!hor
RENT20WN
11173.
wlbackhoe attachment, dlntl
614-448-3158
onglno and John o.rw 300
Vl're F~mlture
Scto &amp; Choir, $11.10 Waak· baCkhoe. 614-eM-7142.
44
Apartment
Rocllntr, $5.47 W01k, Swlvol
Rocker, $3.63 Waok.Bunk Bod Racondhlonod Wuhoro, Dryoro.
for Rent
Complatt $8.41 W11kt 4 Drawer Guorantaod prompl aarvlce for
makoa, modota. Tho ·Waohor
1-BR,
furnlehtd
baatment Choot, $3.26 Waok: Pooler Bod· 111
Dryer Shoppa.l14-44f-21144.
6'15-3431.

Goo HMt.__Air Cond., AlliO,

Wanted to Buy
Emply Solem and · Camel

Olan. 11182, 614-182-7083/

8112-3027.
;;---;-;---;---;---:---:3 ondn1 4 bedroom hamaa tor
rent, ce yard, 304-675-3030 or

(Golllpollo/Bidwoll). Houro: 3:30- Vory nlco 3-BR Ronch, brick

9

. ,.... ~cUgn 1110 empty
RMmen c:hiWftng loblc:co
packlgoo, $.05 aa. Any amoiM1t

-~

UPS AND DOWNS ..

46 Space for Rent

Sunday 12 Noon Till Sp.m. 4
Mlt11 Off Route 7 On Route 141,
In C.nlenuy.

WMI VIrginia, 304-m-1781.

MICtion Mrvict. Llcen..a Ohio,

Eil 1117811.

I THINK M SUSPENDED
FI\OM THE BUN6EE CORD
OF LIFE ..

I HAVE TOO MANY
VS'&lt;UII &lt;Hilo(
14Et.f 54-

''CA5~" ... H£ UI(£S
COLORil.EP 1/ERSIOt.IS CF
"THE OOW~ BOYS~ l

00 fAIR TALKI~&amp; liKE
000'.1.0 DUCK!

1 br Acartment. living Room
Fumlsfltd.
Kitchen,
Stove,
Refrigerator, Dishwasher, Garbage Dlapoal, Shower In Bath;

Rotoo. No Job To Smolll 614- work In bathroom, $2500, 6143711·21142.
m-7821.
G10rgn Pontblt Sawmill, don't 1078 Bayview 14)[70, 2br, Den,

11

YOU CAA ~
TOGE1ltER

1 BR houu: total tlec., eero11

2!528.

ond dovolopmontal dlnbllllln
prolorrod. Solory: $8.DOihour, to
atort, Sind r..umo to Coclllo
Baklr1 _~.0. Box 804, Jackson,
OH ... 40. O.odllno lor 0 1'"
pUconta: 111191. Equal Opportunlty Employer.

11

I~TER£55

lT~ T16T£5 L£Aij iONAAD

8- 1

Unique 3 bedroom hoU11 on 10
acrH, 1 mile from Middleport,
Low 30'• &amp;t4-m-:188t

Clalltfng.

:to 10:~:00pm.

..

,..

Furnished
Rooms

7:00pm.

lil-•

wot•;=-.".1.!-a :,;::o;,\

room,

dining room, kitchen, bath.
Available Aug. 3. Coli 614-IKI22403 or 802-2710, .
Wodgo Apta, 506 Burdatta 81
Polnl Plooaont, no oota._l and 2
bodrooma, 304-117ll-20n altor
5:00.

room Suite, 7 pc., $11.81 WHk,
lncludta Becldlng.Couriry Pine
Olnette With Bench &amp; 4 Chalra,

worha part of 1 taam roqulroct; Available. Mid Ohfo Flnonco 1·
oxparlonco working with par- 500-189-5711.
'

Jlllndoy Aug. \ t :OG-4:00, Jr.
Rt. 124, Racine, ron
CIMIIa. tumlu,., loti glrll

' .•'

daelrablt locallon, new root,
new 3-car gartga, Interior nMde

OM peld tor compil ing namH
1nd lddrHMI, $500. per 1,000.

Lola move M outl Hugo gorogo
1111. 315 Condor St., Pom~roy. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Typloto: Port-Tlmo. Excellent
Allglllll·2-3.
. Moving Balli Everything gooa, Poyl Your Own Houro. Coli 1lumMift and mlac., Troy 'BulK 100-820-1988 $3/llln.
nllr, 12--voil ~~. toota. Dll· WANTED: Part-time Ucenud
' ton'a, Rt.tll1, llnowvllo, Aug 1-5. Proctlcal Nuroo (20 hralwk) for
Mow«, 1rmy cloth• KtrHnl two community group homta

~

Walnlll SL Mlddlopon, Dupin

C()II.JJ(J,l

ntAT S~l.D BE 5QW:TliiN6

1 Bedroom Fumlohod Ho..o.
735RoorThlrdAvonuo1 $1501mo,
tiOO DopoaH, 114 446 &gt;870, 614448-1340.
.

from Unlvorally ol Rio Grondo.
Homes
lor
Sale
Avolloblo
Aug. ath. &amp;14-38831
IKI46.
::-::---::-:-:-:-:=---c-7
12 ~r old, 3-BR, 2-Gith homo. 1 houao, 3-bdrm In Roclno, 2
Doy lght baoomant, 1-lcro, houtn 4-bdrm In Pomeroy, S14-

cr:-ttt,

hontllntoOO.., fl llor, much more.

-. -

11711 Dotoun Plck.Up. Good
Motor, Tr~~nemllelon, Body Ruff,
Gocid Work Truck! $500. 1144411-01131 After &amp;p.m.
1112 GMC Shortbod, Auto, 350
Englno. 614-388-lliS.
1115 llozdo B-2000 Whh Toppar,
Now Brakoa Tlrwo Exho ..t Eo·
collon! Coiidhlon. 114,.46-7907.
1g11 lauzu r,lckup, 4 cy~ 4
apaod, now r m~ 1 mutldaro ond
hlldora, hood unero, roll bar
and loa llahla, $2.500. or ball
oflar. RouDng trolllr, 8x18 n.
now · wood.._ ltoovy duly bad,
$300. 304-5to-2148.
1VII8 Chovy S-10, 4 cyl, 5 opaad,
2 tone paint, very nice truck
$5000, 614-IKI2-t302.

DO YOU AND '1WR
HUS6AND IWE

The Dall

'·

41 Houses for Rent
"Which estimate do you want? How much
It's gonna cost to repair It or how long It'll
take you to get Insured again?"

AI Cl~rlo
Cllland,
3-Fomlly,
StAutlond,
Auguot
1,2,3 lloln r
Aug 2-3, 5 Polnla oroa. ShHto,
comlortara, knlck-knlcka, clothlng, wornon'a 5-10, mon'a largo 11
Help Wanted
aiU, bon clothing, curtolno,
lola o1 olftar mlac K11111, 10:0G4:00, watch lor algna, 614-IKI2· EARN IIONE\' Raadlng boqkoi
U70.
$30,000/rr. lnconM~tontlol.
ft..
ull1·2, Now Limo Rd., Rut· - •11• · 1) 801.-962
DEld . Y1011V.

~.-

1977 Font f·100, $1,500; 61-4-446-

privoto antnnco, Ulllltloo paldJ
unlllrnlohod,
304-e7&amp;-161o
avanlnga.
Upotalra Fumlohod Apanmont,
4 R-.o I Both. No Polo.
Rotoronco I Security O.pooll.

45

t10 So. 2nd 81., lllddlopon, July
31"'ug l'UI. Lola or mlac.
All Yord Soloo lluod Bo Pold In
Advanco. O.ollno: 1:00pm tho
dey bator. tho od lo to run,
Sundoy odHion- 1:00pm Frldoy,
llondoy
od~lon
10:00o.m.
Soturdoy.

Trucks for Sale

Pomeroy~lddlepcm_. .Q.hJo . . .

LOSER

1, 1991

3811

Mercer Bottom Subodlvltlon,
one ecre loCI, Rt. 2 frontage,
price reduced, chy water, lQ4.
578-2336.

Allll1"

Clothing, toye,

72

Up811lra . 1pt, 5 roomtlbath,

114-245'11448.

For Solo: Alvar bank propany In
lloaon. :J04.'773-58S1.
Trailer Lot For Ront, 10 Millo
From Golllpolla, (RI. 141) 614·
3711-2601.

4MI2 SR 248 In Cheltar, Dl•
Amway l)n&gt;ducta,
- t a r , gun coblnol, mlac,

~.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ bJ Larry Wrlaht

Apartment
for Rent

MW

3 Family yard oalo, Aug 2, 370
G..m lllddlopolt, Aug. 3, 3..a. . . ."" blockl

PomM"OY.

August

OhiO

.

1 1991

NO RTII

BRIDGE

+ A7

H91

nn

.A KQ

.

t 76532

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

EAST

WEST

...

• 10 8 53

.K QJ 9

•o n

'f2
110984
+9 i 6 5

...

+ K 10 7 4 3 2

SOU Til

Kaos comes back
against Control

• J 10 9 6 ' 3
t A K QJ
+A QJ

Vulnerable: East-West
Dea ler : South

By Phillip Alder
The rubber -bridge match continues
between Control and Kaos. those two
spy organizations wi th unlis ted telephone numbers tha t arc in a ll Was hington . D.C.. directori es.
Control is vulnerable thanks to a
slam m ade by Max well Smart. A~e nt
86 . Two oth er contrac ts went down:
th e fourth hand was thrown in Today 's hand 1s th e fifth .
The auction was difficult Over
three diamonds. pe rha ps Shtarker .
North . should have te mporized with
three hearts. But actually he made a
void~showing splinter b1d of fove clubs
When Siegfried, South . jumped to so x
diamonds. Shtar ker drew the conclusion th a t to do all that bidding without
the spade ace or A-K-Q or hea rts. Siegfried had to have good trumps
"Sorry of zis os wronR. Sic gfned ··

North

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

East
Pa ss

,7 .•
I+

Pass
All pass .

Opening lea d· • K

· diffi c ult. Fmally ~oeg l· nca s ~o ltcd tl)e
right play . He pu t up dummy's spade
ace and discarded a heart. He led a di·
amond to hand . uncovering the bad
splil. ruffed th e club jack in the dum my, played a second trump to hand
and ruffed the club queen tn the dummy . Dummy's hear t ace was cashed .
and dumm y's lasl di amond was led lo
hand. Now Sieglried cashed the dismond ace and club ere. disca rding tlie
K·Q of hea rts from the dummy . I!•
claimed th e re m a onder with his four

'" Vel I. seve n hearts 1s bcll('r . but zis heart winners.
is n't a bad shpot ."
"Briilia nl . Siegfned: " excla imed
The Chief led the spade kong. It was Shlarker.
.
c lea r to Soeg fncd th atlhe onl y da nge r
"Oh. it vos nuttong," replied Sieg~
to hos eontrael was a 4-0 I rump brea k. fried with fa lse modesty .
. whictl would ma ke comm unt ca tiOn S
© 1n1 . NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE USN.

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 -colada
5 Metallic
sound
9 Econ.
Indicator
12 Measure ol
lime
13 Dye
14 Beam olllght
t5 Let-(Baatlaa
album)
16 Cry of pain
17 Make known
18 Pasta dlah
20 Lelauroly
walk
22 Small
23 Antelope
24 Weather

...

tree

36- .,.-My
Heart
37 Baby lrog
39 Mountain·
eer'a aid

forecaster 's

balloon
27 Skaler Peggy
31 Sacrad
32 Oceanfront
attracllon
33 Slick y atulf

Anawtr lo Prevloua PuzJie

34 Be In debt to
35 Cone-bearing

40 Caviar
41 Place for
uerclaa
42 Mualclan
45 Eternally
49 '-clrats
Charlotte50 Ttat
52 Nnt ol
pheasants
53 Medical
aulflr
54 Poaltlon
55 Sot up (goll
ball)
56 Non-profit TV
57 Layer
58 Haa
DOWN

2 Small amount
3 Story polnta
4 Baoamont
courtyard
5 Actor John

6 Fraahwalar
porpoloe
7 Wea drink

1 Singer Harris

Stereo. r:;l

Golden Yeara As Harlan.
Gina and Terry run. Jude
takes over the investigation.

Stereo. Q
till Ill Star Trak
18 WO!Id Newt
® 700 Club Wltlt Pat

Robertlon
10:05 (]) MOVIE: Mra. Solie I (PG I31
(2:15)
10:30 (!) (I) New Tolevlalon
Stereo. Q
12!1 Croolt end Chill
11 :00 (%) D !Il (i) (I) . , ®I
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�Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 1, 1991

New migraine drug offers fast, effective relief
BOSToN (AP) _.:... An experimental new medicine offers quick,
effective treatment of migraine
headaches, shutting off the pain
completely for most victims, a
study shows.
The research shows that the
drug, sumatriptan, offers relief for
most sufferers within an hour or
two of being injected. Doctors who
tested the medicine called it "a
highly effective, rapid-acting and
well-tolerated treatment for
migraine attacks.''
Their study, conducted on 639
people with severe headaches, is
the latest of a series of recent
reports demonstrating the effects of
the medicine, whicl) is produced by
Glaxo Inc. Sumatriptan has not yet
been approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration for routine use.

The study was conducted by Dr. . both disorders are already avail·
Michel D. Ferrari of University able, despite assertions to the conHospital in Leiden, Netherlands, trary in both papers," he wrote.
He said sumatriptan is interestalong with doctors from Canada,
Israel, South Africa and five Euro- ing because it is a so-called designpean countries. It was published in er drug, a medicine created specifiThursday's New England Journal cally to take advamage of a particular biological feature of a disease.
of Medicine.
Sumatriptan apparently works
A second study in the journal,
by
interfering with the body's use
directed by Dr. K. Ekbom of
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, of a messenger chemical in the
found the drug to be effective brain known as serotonin. Although
doctors have long known that seroagainst cluster headaches, as well.
In both studies, doctors com- tonin plays some role in migraines,
pared sumatriptan with placebos, :hey still do not understand preciserather than other migrain e ly how sumatriptan relieves the
me&lt;Jicmes. They said no effective, attacks.
The migraine study showed that
wtdely accepted treatment exists.
However, in an editorial review- after two hours, about 90 percent of
ing the work, Dr. Neil H. Raskin of those getting sumatriptan found
the University of California, San their headaches were mild or had
Francisco, disputed this conclusion. gone away completely, compared
"Several effective treatments for with one-third of those getting
dummy shots.

Ohio Lottery
Meigs ACS
golf tourney
results

Pick 3:557
Pick 4: 6777
Cards : A-H, 4-C
3-D;S-S
High today In 90s. Sa turday,
sunny. High In 90s.

Page4

VOl. 42, No. 63
Copyrighted 1991

GOSPEL LADS • The Gospel Lads, a southern-style gospel quartet, will be in concert at the
Gallipolis Christian Church, SR 588, Sunday,
Aug. 4 at 9:30 a.m. The group has been singing

nearly 20 years. The public is welcomed and
a nursery is available. For more information call
Denny Coburn, senior minister or Mic Bowen,
youth minister at 446-1863.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.

During the past school year the
Leukemia Society of America, Inc.,
sponsored a Bunny Hop throughout
school s and day care centers in
Ohio.
In order to be eligible for a new
bicycle participants had to collect
$200 for their sponsors.
Winner of the new bicycle was
Lucy Howerton, a kindergarten student at Middleport Elementary. She
was notified of her win by Ann R.
Grossman, program coordinator of
the Leukemia Society.
She is the daughter of Phyllis
and Virgil Howerton, Williams
Street, Middleport.

HERE IS JUST AFEW OF THE SAVINGS
GLASS TOP TABLES s58, s681 s78
Solid wood with glass tops by Riverside.

Graves approved

LUCY HOWERTON

VENTURA, Calif. (AP) Ronald and Nancy Reagan won
approval to be buried on the
grounds of his presidential library,
despite protests from environmentalists who complained the graves
would cause pollution by attracting
tourists.
Ventura County supervisors
unanimously approved the request
Tuesday.

Chester community news
The Ladies Auxiliary of the fire
department enjoyed an outing to
Blennerhassett Island in place of
the regular meeting. After the
Island tour they had dinner in Belpre and a short meeting at the Belpre park. Reports were given by the
secretary and Inzy Newell, vice
president. Going on the trip were
Cleo Smith, Opal Eichinger, Bonnie Landers, Inzy Newell, June and
Janet Ridenour, Clarice Allen,
Pauline Ridenour, Betty Newell,
Clara Conroy, Paula and Chelsey
Wood, Dorothy Hawk. Elizabeth
Hayes, Lora Damewood and her
sister. Erma Cleland. Marcia
Keller, Ethel Orr and Opal Hollon.

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cleland,

Columbus, were visitors of Mrs.
Erma Cleland on Monday.
Ethel Orr and daughter, Martha
Lee, attended a family reunion at
the Sky Line Ranch resort in Front
Royal. Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Weber, Misso uri , and Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Weber, Akron, were recent guests
of Marcia Keller, Don and Allen
called on their cousin, Clayton
Allen, Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. James Ridenour
and Janet and Mr. and Mrs. John L.
Ridenour enjoyed a weeks vacation
in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Krackomberg-

er have returned to their home in
New Jersey, have been called here
by the death of his sister, Iva Raybum.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hutchinso n, Belleville, were recent
overnight guests of Pauline Ridenour. They also visited with Opal
Wickham.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Biggs,
Unionport, visited with his sister,
Bonnie Landers. They came to
auend the Biggs reunion on Sunday
at the Chester firehouse.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Clay and
Suzanne have returned home from
a weeks vacation in Myrtle Beach,
S.C.

Honda bringing high-efficiency engine
By FREDERICK STANDISH
AP Auto Writer
DETROIT (AP) - Honda says
it will offer a Civic this fall that can
get 65 miles per gallon without
having to get out of the fast lane a development that could give the
Big Three automakers a run for
their money.
Honda Motor Co. and Mit sut!ishi Motors Corp. announced in
Japan on Tuesday they have develengines that solve what has
Jx:.eu.&lt;~ proPll;lll for designers:
6ow to boost fuel economy without
sacrificing horsepower.
They say their new engines
improve fuel use 20 percent without loss of power.
"It's probably giving the boys
in Detroit a few sleepless nights ,"

c

said auto analyst Joseph Phillippi
of Shearson Lehman Brothers in
New York. "It appears that the
kind of performance statistics we
are looking at here are not slugs."
The Big Three are also working
to improve improving engine efficiency and power. Ford Motor Co.
has a new engine going into some
of its large cars that gets better
mileage and produces more horsepower than its predecessor.
Honda' s engine, the VTEC-E,
will be in the Honda Civic Hatchback VX due in this country later
this year. Honda officials have said
the engine could get up to 65 mpg
on the highway; the U.S. government has yet to certify that rating.
Honda said it eventually will use
the engine in all iiS cars.

The engines are likely to be
slightly more expensive, Honda
spokesman Hideyo Miyano said in
Tokyo.
Mitsubishi hasn' t said when its
engine will be available in the
United States.
All automakers except extremely low-volume companies like Ferrari must meet federal fuel economy standards of 27.5 mpg for cars
sold in the United States. The standard is the average mileage for the
manufacturer's full fleet of cars in
a given year.
A Ford engineering executive
said the Honda and Mitsubishi
development seem to involve technology with which the Big Three
have worked for several years.

.,

PEACHES!

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'71 0 England Sofa &amp; Loveseat, cream, mauve $1425
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blue &amp; brown plaid.
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4--H WINNERS • Presented grand champion awards in their
respective clas.'ieS for project work were these 4-H members, front,
left to right, Jill Lemley, Martie Holter, Lisa Smith (front), Amy
smith, Susie Francis, Kelley Grueser, Rebekah Karr, Danielle

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News StafT ·
"Fashion Forecast" was the
theme of the 1991 Meigs County 4H style revue staged Thursday
evening on the hill stage at the
Rock Springs fairgrounds.
Everything from formals to
lounge wear was included in the
revue by more than 4-H members
who modeled the garments they
had constructed as a part of their
project work.
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County
Extension Agent, narrating the

show from the stage decorated in a
colorful motif, announced the
grand and reserve champions, and
those selected to take their projects
to the Ohio State Fair.
The classes and the winners in
each class were:
"Adventures in Clothing":
Christy Drake, grand; Patty Nally,
reserve: Rebekah Karr, honorable
mention.
"Topping Your Outfit": Billee
Pooler, reserve; Allison Williams,
honorable mention.
"Joyful Jumper": Denise Shenefield, grand: Billi Jo Bentley,

Davis re-sentenced on sex charge

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS FOUND THROUGHOUT THE STORE

RUTLAND FURNITURE ·- CO~
RUTLAND, OHIO

Grueser, and Christy Drake. Announcement or tbe winners was
made at tbe 4--H Style Revue held Thursday night on the hill stage
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.

'Fashion.Forecast' theme of 4-H Style Revue

Local briefs

z

Bl Kathryn Crow
Sentmel Correspondent
"All the work that can be done
until fall has been done on Snowball Hill Cemetery," Councilmen
Minter Fryer told Syt'!!Cuse Village
Council Thursday mght.
According to Fryer, the workmen asked to delay the completion
of the removal of trees at the cemetery near the line fence until a later
date due to numerous snakes in the
area including moccasins. Fryer
stated that snakes were everywhere. All the cutting and cleaning
has been completed, he noted, and
four large loads of dirt have been
placed at the cemetery. Sunken
graves have been filled in and a
further check will be made to be
sure none have been missed, he
said.
It was reported that Milton
Roush had loaned the village a
scoop for the village truck in order
to spread the dirt at the cemetery
and Council extended a thanks to
him. Stones will be replaced once
the property equipment to do the
job is acquired, it was noted.
A letter was read from Dorothy
Roller, Middleport, who sent a
check to help with the cemetery
cleanup. She commended Council
for the work being done there and
advised that she will be contacting
lot owners about contributions.
As to the matter of snakes,

Councilman Jack Wtthams reported that a huge moccasin had been
seen at Rose Valley.
Council decided to contract the
sewer board about a privacy fence
being placed around the pump station which is located at municipal
park.
It was noted by Fryer that the
merry-go-round will be put in place
this week at the park. Money for
new playground equipment was
provided through a donation from
the Bikers Association.
In a discussion in regard to new
street signs being put in place, it
was noted that almost all signs are
up and that additional signs have
been ordered. William s said that
motorists are using the one-way
Sand Hill Road in the wrong direction creating a hazardous situation.
Prior 10 the meeting Mayor Eber
Pickens swore in Dennis Wolfe as
a new member Of council filling the
unexpired term of Jim Hill. Wolfe
will run for re-election in the fall.
Since members took no action on
electing a president of council,
Mayor Pickens appointed Fryer.
The mayor 's report showed
receipts of $918.
Attending besides those named
were Kenny Buckley, Jim Pape and
Kathryn Crow, council members;
Janet Lawson, clerk-treasurer, and
Jim Connolly, police chief.

OSHA inspectors to
return to Ravenswood

s1288

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champions iii their classes. Lel't to right, they are Denise Shenefield, Michelle Laughery, Debra Frost, Elizabeth Downie, Beth
Clark, Ruby Burke, and Anita Calaway and ber Janet Calaway,
CrooL

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GRAND CHAMPIONS • At the 1991 Meigs County 4--H Style
Revue held on tbe bill stage on tbe Rock Springs Fairgrounds
Thursday night, these girls were among the ones receiving grand

s733

RECLINERS

A Multimedia

Cemetery
work halted
by snakes

END OF THE MONTH

Bunny hop set

cento
Inc. Newapapar

2 Section, 14 Pages 25
(

Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow III has
re-sentenced Ronald Davis of Middleport on charges of gross sexual imposition.
.
The Fourth District Court of Appeals upheld Davis' conviction
but remanded the case for sentencing, stating that the court did not
have sufficient time to consider factors in the' sentencing.
Crow sentenced Davis to a two year sentence in prison, the same
sentence that Davis had received earlier. Davis was remanded to the
sherifrs department and will be conveyed to prison on August 8.

Grady pleads guilty to charge
Richard Grady, 19, entered a voluntary plea of guilty in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court earlia this week to a charge of cor·
rupting a minor.
Continued on page 3

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va (AP) Concern over higher than normal
numbers of workplace injuries is
prompting a detailed inspection of
parts of the Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. plant beginning next
week, federal officials said.
The federal Occupational Safety
and Health Administration will
inspect the plant's reduction facility and the finishing department of
its fabrication facility, agency
spokesman Doug Fuller said.
He said the agency decided on
the probe after a more limited
inspection in June disclosed a higher-than-expected rate of workplace
injuries in the two parts of the
plant
"The lost workday injury rates
in the reduction and fabrication
facilities are above the national
average, while the rates in the
remainder of the facility are below
the national average," Fuller said.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.,
sa id inspections will take about
three months to complete. Fuller
did not disoute the estimate but

reserve: and Andrea Neutzling , reserve, and Tracy Card, honorable
Kim Janey, and Jamie Williamson. mention.
"Active Sportswear": Amy
Continued on page 3
Smith, grand; Melissa Dempsey,
reserve, and Robin Donohue and
Martha Russell, honorable men tion.
"Spectator Sportswear": Ruby
Burke, grand: Mary Grueser,
reserve; and Anna Wolf itnd Nicola
Pickens, honorable mention.
"Clothes for Middle School":
Kelley Grueser, grand; Billi Jo
Bentley, reserve ; and Jennifer
Mora, honorable mention.
"Clothes for High School and
Beyond"; Beth Clark, grand, and
Vicki Warner, reserve.
"Dress Up Formal": Michelle
Laughery, grand.
"Dress-Up Daywear": Debra
Frost, grand; Anita Calaway,
reserve; and Misi Neutzling, honorable mention.
"Time Out for Clothing !": Jill
Lemley, grand; Pamela Neece,
reserve;.
"Time Out for Clothing II":
Martie Holter, grand.
"Lounging ClOihes": Susie
Francis, grand; Kristi Warner,
reserve.
"Clothing Complements":
Rebekah Karr, grand: Alicia Russell, reserve.
MOVING ALONG • Coostrnctloo crews tor
"Coats and Jackets": Elizabeth
Wesam Construction or Pomeroy are on the
Downie, grand.
scene at tbe headquarters at the Department or
"Fun with Clothes": Danielle
Human Services in Middleport, where a threeGrueser, grand; Alicia Russell,
story, $l.Z million addition Is beiDJI buUL Tb~1
«&lt;

said the len-gth of the inspections
will depend on what inspectors
find.
Byrd said Labor Secretary Lynn
Martin "has assured me that this
will be a full-scope safety inspection that will be conducted by a
six-member team of Occupation
Safety and Health Administration
compliance officials."
Calls to Ravenswood Aluminum
spokeswoman Debbie Boger were
not returned Thursday.
Fuller said inspectors will be
accompanied by representatives of
the United Steelworkers and
replacement workers the company
hired to replace union workers
idled by a labor dispute at the plant
that entered iiS lOth month Thursday.
The union has been locked in a
labor dispute with Ravenswood
Aluminum since Nov. I, when its
contract expired. About I ,700
union workers are off the job; the
union says they arc locked out and
the comoany says they're on strike.
Continued on page 3

project Is expected to be eompleted In Spring
1991, and will consolidate all ortlces or th~
department_, .wbicb are eurrently scattered
throughout Mtddleport.

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